Cell Reports (May 2013)

Self-Renewing Human Bone Marrow Mesenspheres Promote Hematopoietic Stem Cell Expansion

  • Joan Isern,
  • Beatriz Martín-Antonio,
  • Roshanak Ghazanfari,
  • Ana M. Martín,
  • Juan A. López,
  • Raquel del Toro,
  • Abel Sánchez-Aguilera,
  • Lorena Arranz,
  • Daniel Martín-Pérez,
  • María Suárez-Lledó,
  • Pedro Marín,
  • Melissa Van Pel,
  • Willem E. Fibbe,
  • Jesús Vázquez,
  • Stefan Scheding,
  • Álvaro Urbano-Ispizúa,
  • Simón Méndez-Ferrer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2013.03.041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 5
pp. 1714 – 1724

Abstract

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Strategies for expanding hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) include coculture with cells that recapitulate their natural microenvironment, such as bone marrow stromal stem/progenitor cells (BMSCs). Plastic-adherent BMSCs may be insufficient to preserve primitive HSCs. Here, we describe a method of isolating and culturing human BMSCs as nonadherent mesenchymal spheres. Human mesenspheres were derived from CD45− CD31− CD71− CD146+ CD105+ nestin+ cells but could also be simply grown from fetal and adult BM CD45−-enriched cells. Human mesenspheres robustly differentiated into mesenchymal lineages. In culture conditions where they displayed a relatively undifferentiated phenotype, with decreased adherence to plastic and increased self-renewal, they promoted enhanced expansion of cord blood CD34+ cells through secreted soluble factors. Expanded HSCs were serially transplantable in immunodeficient mice and significantly increased long-term human hematopoietic engraftment. These results pave the way for culture techniques that preserve the self-renewal of human BMSCs and their ability to support functional HSCs.