Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.

BACKGROUND: Cell based therapies are required now to meet the critical care needs of paediatrics and healthy ageing in an increasingly long-lived human population. Repair of compromised tissue by supporting autologous regeneration is a life changing objective uniting the fields of medical science an...

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Main Authors: Nicholas Bryan, Fiona C Lewis, Damian Bond, Christopher Stanley, John A Hunt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3551971?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7c6b76c2baba415daf47f3ae1c2874db2020-11-25T02:32:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0181e5393310.1371/journal.pone.0053933Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.Nicholas BryanFiona C LewisDamian BondChristopher StanleyJohn A HuntBACKGROUND: Cell based therapies are required now to meet the critical care needs of paediatrics and healthy ageing in an increasingly long-lived human population. Repair of compromised tissue by supporting autologous regeneration is a life changing objective uniting the fields of medical science and engineering. Adipose stem cells (adSCs) are a compelling candidate for use in cell based medicine due to their plasticity and residence in numerous tissues. Adipose found in all animals contains a relatively high concentration of stem cells and is easily isolated by a minimally invasive clinical intervention; such as liposuction. METHODS: This study utilised primary rat adipose to validate a novel strategy for selecting adult stem cells. Experiments explored the use of large, very dense cell-specific antibody loaded isolation beads (diameter 5x-10x greater than target cells) which overcome the problem of endocytosis and have proved to be very effective in cell isolation from minimally processed primary tissue. The technique also benefited from pH mediated release, which enabled elution of captured cells using a simple pH shift. RESULTS: Large beads successfully captured and released adSCs from rat adipose, which were characterised using a combination of microscopy, flow cytometry and PCR. The resultant purified cell population retains minimal capture artefact facilitating autologous reperfusion or application in in vitro models. CONCLUSION: Although evidenced here for adSCs, this approach provides a technological advance at a platform level; whereby it can be applied to isolate any cell population for which there is a characterised surface antigen.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3551971?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicholas Bryan
Fiona C Lewis
Damian Bond
Christopher Stanley
John A Hunt
spellingShingle Nicholas Bryan
Fiona C Lewis
Damian Bond
Christopher Stanley
John A Hunt
Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Nicholas Bryan
Fiona C Lewis
Damian Bond
Christopher Stanley
John A Hunt
author_sort Nicholas Bryan
title Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.
title_short Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.
title_full Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.
title_fullStr Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.
title_sort evaluation of a novel non-destructive catch and release technology for harvesting autologous adult stem cells.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Cell based therapies are required now to meet the critical care needs of paediatrics and healthy ageing in an increasingly long-lived human population. Repair of compromised tissue by supporting autologous regeneration is a life changing objective uniting the fields of medical science and engineering. Adipose stem cells (adSCs) are a compelling candidate for use in cell based medicine due to their plasticity and residence in numerous tissues. Adipose found in all animals contains a relatively high concentration of stem cells and is easily isolated by a minimally invasive clinical intervention; such as liposuction. METHODS: This study utilised primary rat adipose to validate a novel strategy for selecting adult stem cells. Experiments explored the use of large, very dense cell-specific antibody loaded isolation beads (diameter 5x-10x greater than target cells) which overcome the problem of endocytosis and have proved to be very effective in cell isolation from minimally processed primary tissue. The technique also benefited from pH mediated release, which enabled elution of captured cells using a simple pH shift. RESULTS: Large beads successfully captured and released adSCs from rat adipose, which were characterised using a combination of microscopy, flow cytometry and PCR. The resultant purified cell population retains minimal capture artefact facilitating autologous reperfusion or application in in vitro models. CONCLUSION: Although evidenced here for adSCs, this approach provides a technological advance at a platform level; whereby it can be applied to isolate any cell population for which there is a characterised surface antigen.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3551971?pdf=render
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