Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells

Abstract Background Our group has developed a novel method for spontaneous spheroid formation using a specific low-adherence culture plate with around 90° water contact angle. In this study, this method was applied for oral mucosa-derived cells. First, the feasibility of spontaneous spheroid formati...

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Main Authors: Ni Li, Xianqi Li, Kai Chen, Hongwei Dong, Hideaki Kagami
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:Stem Cell Research & Therapy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13287-019-1283-0
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spelling doaj-4a1d84cbb51a44099c60136b337d3f8f2020-11-25T03:05:23ZengBMCStem Cell Research & Therapy1757-65122019-06-0110111510.1186/s13287-019-1283-0Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cellsNi Li0Xianqi Li1Kai Chen2Hongwei Dong3Hideaki Kagami4Department of Hard Tissue Research, Graduate School of Oral Medicine, Matsumoto Dental UniversityDepartment of Hard Tissue Research, Graduate School of Oral Medicine, Matsumoto Dental UniversityDepartment of Hard Tissue Research, Graduate School of Oral Medicine, Matsumoto Dental UniversityDepartment of Hard Tissue Research, Graduate School of Oral Medicine, Matsumoto Dental UniversityDepartment of Hard Tissue Research, Graduate School of Oral Medicine, Matsumoto Dental UniversityAbstract Background Our group has developed a novel method for spontaneous spheroid formation using a specific low-adherence culture plate with around 90° water contact angle. In this study, this method was applied for oral mucosa-derived cells. First, the feasibility of spontaneous spheroid formation was tested. Next, the characteristics of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa- and skin-derived cells were compared with special focus on the stemness and neuronal differentiation capability. Methods Oral mucosal cells were obtained from the palate and buccal mucosa of C57BL/6J mice. Similarly, skin cells were obtained from the back of the same mouse strain. Passage 2–3 cells were inoculated into the specific low-adherence culture plates to form spontaneous spheroids. The effect of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), epidermal growth factor (EGF), and B27 supplement on spheroid formation and maintenance was assessed. Immunofluorescence and quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) were performed to investigate the expression of pluripotency markers, cell proliferation and apoptosis markers, and neurogenic differentiation markers. Results Using this culture plate, spontaneous spheroid formation was feasible. This process depended on the presence of serum but was independent of the additives such as bFGF, EGF, and B27 supplement, although they improved the efficiency and were essential for spheroid maintenance. This result was confirmed by the higher expression of Caspase7 in the spheroids cultured without the additives than that with the additives. The spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells expressed stem cell markers, such as Sox2, SSEA1, Oct4, Nanog, and Nestin. The expression of Sox2 in spheroids from oral mucosal cells was higher than that in spheroids from skin-derived cells. Both spheroid-forming cell types had the ability to differentiate into neural and Schwann cells after neurogenic induction, although significantly higher MAP 2, MBP, Nestin, and Nurr1 gene expression was noted in the cells from oral mucosa-derived spheroids. Conclusions The results showed that spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells contain highly potent stem cells, which were as good as skin-derived stem cells. The high expression of certain neuronal marker genes suggests an advantage of these cells for regeneration therapy for neuronal disorders.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13287-019-1283-0Oral mucosaSkinSomatic stem cellsSpontaneous spheroidPluripotent stem cellsCell differentiation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ni Li
Xianqi Li
Kai Chen
Hongwei Dong
Hideaki Kagami
spellingShingle Ni Li
Xianqi Li
Kai Chen
Hongwei Dong
Hideaki Kagami
Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells
Stem Cell Research & Therapy
Oral mucosa
Skin
Somatic stem cells
Spontaneous spheroid
Pluripotent stem cells
Cell differentiation
author_facet Ni Li
Xianqi Li
Kai Chen
Hongwei Dong
Hideaki Kagami
author_sort Ni Li
title Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells
title_short Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells
title_full Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells
title_fullStr Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells
title_sort characterization of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells and their direct comparison with spheroids from skin-derived cells
publisher BMC
series Stem Cell Research & Therapy
issn 1757-6512
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background Our group has developed a novel method for spontaneous spheroid formation using a specific low-adherence culture plate with around 90° water contact angle. In this study, this method was applied for oral mucosa-derived cells. First, the feasibility of spontaneous spheroid formation was tested. Next, the characteristics of spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa- and skin-derived cells were compared with special focus on the stemness and neuronal differentiation capability. Methods Oral mucosal cells were obtained from the palate and buccal mucosa of C57BL/6J mice. Similarly, skin cells were obtained from the back of the same mouse strain. Passage 2–3 cells were inoculated into the specific low-adherence culture plates to form spontaneous spheroids. The effect of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), epidermal growth factor (EGF), and B27 supplement on spheroid formation and maintenance was assessed. Immunofluorescence and quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) were performed to investigate the expression of pluripotency markers, cell proliferation and apoptosis markers, and neurogenic differentiation markers. Results Using this culture plate, spontaneous spheroid formation was feasible. This process depended on the presence of serum but was independent of the additives such as bFGF, EGF, and B27 supplement, although they improved the efficiency and were essential for spheroid maintenance. This result was confirmed by the higher expression of Caspase7 in the spheroids cultured without the additives than that with the additives. The spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells expressed stem cell markers, such as Sox2, SSEA1, Oct4, Nanog, and Nestin. The expression of Sox2 in spheroids from oral mucosal cells was higher than that in spheroids from skin-derived cells. Both spheroid-forming cell types had the ability to differentiate into neural and Schwann cells after neurogenic induction, although significantly higher MAP 2, MBP, Nestin, and Nurr1 gene expression was noted in the cells from oral mucosa-derived spheroids. Conclusions The results showed that spontaneous spheroids from oral mucosa-derived cells contain highly potent stem cells, which were as good as skin-derived stem cells. The high expression of certain neuronal marker genes suggests an advantage of these cells for regeneration therapy for neuronal disorders.
topic Oral mucosa
Skin
Somatic stem cells
Spontaneous spheroid
Pluripotent stem cells
Cell differentiation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13287-019-1283-0
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