Stem Cell Reports (Jun 2015)

Multiparameter Analysis of Human Bone Marrow Stromal Cells Identifies Distinct Immunomodulatory and Differentiation-Competent Subtypes

  • Sally James,
  • James Fox,
  • Farinaz Afsari,
  • Jennifer Lee,
  • Sally Clough,
  • Charlotte Knight,
  • James Ashmore,
  • Peter Ashton,
  • Olivier Preham,
  • Martin Hoogduijn,
  • Raquel De Almeida Rocha Ponzoni,
  • Y. Hancock,
  • Mark Coles,
  • Paul Genever

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stemcr.2015.05.005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 6
pp. 1004 – 1015

Abstract

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Bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs, also called bone-marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells) provide hematopoietic support and immunoregulation and contain a stem cell fraction capable of skeletogenic differentiation. We used immortalized human BMSC clonal lines for multi-level analysis of functional markers for BMSC subsets. All clones expressed typical BMSC cell-surface antigens; however, clones with trilineage differentiation capacity exhibited enhanced vascular interaction gene sets, whereas non-differentiating clones were uniquely CD317 positive with significantly enriched immunomodulatory transcriptional networks and high IL-7 production. IL-7 lineage tracing and CD317 immunolocalization confirmed the existence of a rare non-differentiating BMSC subtype, distinct from Cxcl12-DsRed+ perivascular stromal cells in vivo. Colony-forming CD317+ IL-7hi cells, identified at ∼1%–3% frequency in heterogeneous human BMSC fractions, were found to have the same biomolecular profile as non-differentiating BMSC clones using Raman spectroscopy. Distinct functional identities can be assigned to BMSC subpopulations, which are likely to have specific roles in immune control, lymphopoiesis, and bone homeostasis.