Artificial Cells, Nanomedicine, and Biotechnology (Dec 2022)

Myogenic commitment of human stem cells by myoblasts Co-culture: a static vs. a dynamic approach

  • Pasqualina Scala,
  • J. Lovecchio,
  • E.P Lamparelli,
  • R. Vitolo,
  • V. Giudice,
  • E. Giordano,
  • C. Selleri,
  • L. Rehak,
  • N. Maffulli,
  • G. Della Porta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21691401.2022.2039684
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 1
pp. 49 – 58

Abstract

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An in-vitro model of human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hBM-MSCs) myogenic commitment by synergic effect of a differentiation media coupled with human primary skeletal myoblasts (hSkMs) co-culture was developed adopting both conventional static co-seeding and perfused culture systems. Static co-seeding provided a notable outcome in terms of gene expression with a significant increase of Desmin (141-fold) and Myosin heavy chain II (MYH2, 32-fold) at day 21, clearly detected also by semi-quantitative immunofluorescence. Under perfusion conditions, myogenic induction ability of hSkMs on hBM-MSCs was exerted by paracrine effect with an excellent gene overexpression and immunofluorescence detection of MYH2 protein; furthermore, due to the dynamic cell culture in separate wells, western blot data were acquired confirming a successful cell commitment at day 14. A significant increase of anti-inflammatory cytokine gene expression, including IL-10 and IL-4 (15-fold and 11-fold, respectively) at day 14, with respect to the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-12A (7-fold at day 21) and IL-1β (1.4-fold at day 7) was also detected during dynamic culture, confirming the immunomodulatory activity of hBM-MSCs along with commitment events. The present study opens interesting perspectives on the use of dynamic culture based on perfusion as a versatile tool to study myogenic events and paracrine cross-talk compared to the simple co-seeding static culture.

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