Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology (Aug 2021)

Decreased Insulin Sensitivity in Telomerase-Immortalized Mesenchymal Stem Cells Affects Efficacy and Outcome of Adipogenic Differentiation in vitro

  • Konstantin Kulebyakin,
  • Konstantin Kulebyakin,
  • Pyotr Tyurin-Kuzmin,
  • Anastasia Efimenko,
  • Anastasia Efimenko,
  • Nikita Voloshin,
  • Anton Kartoshkin,
  • Maxim Karagyaur,
  • Maxim Karagyaur,
  • Olga Grigorieva,
  • Ekaterina Novoseletskaya,
  • Veronika Sysoeva,
  • Pavel Makarevich,
  • Pavel Makarevich,
  • Vsevolod Tkachuk,
  • Vsevolod Tkachuk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2021.662078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Modern biomedical science still experiences a significant need for easy and reliable sources of human cells. They are used to investigate pathological processes underlying disease, conduct pharmacological studies, and eventually applied as a therapeutic product in regenerative medicine. For decades, the pool of adult mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) remains a promising source of stem and progenitor cells. Their isolation is more feasible than most other stem cells from human donors, yet they have a fair share of drawbacks. They include significant variability between donors, loss of potency, and transformation during long-term culture, which may impact the efficacy and reproducibility of research. One possible solution is a derivation of immortalized MSCs lines which receive a broader use in many medical and biological studies. In the present work, we demonstrated that in the most widely spread commercially available hTERT-immortalized MSCs cell line ASC52telo, sensitivity to hormonal stimuli was reduced, affecting their differentiation efficacy. Furthermore, we found that immortalized MSCs have impaired insulin-dependent and cAMP-dependent signaling, which impairs their adipogenic, but not osteogenic or chondrogenic, potential under experimental conditions. Our findings indicate that hTERT-immortalized MSCs may present a suboptimal choice for studies involving modeling or investigation of hormonal sensitivity.

Keywords