The potential use of human mesenchymal stem cells for therapeutic applications implies large scale in vitro culture, increasing the probability of genetic instability and transformation. We examine here the incidence of unbalanced and balanced chromosome rearrangements in polyclonal and single cell-derived cultures of human adipose stem cells to senescence. G-banding karyotyping of the polyclonal cultures shows a normal karyotype. In addition, high-resolution microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization analyses relative to uncultured adipose stem cells from the same donors reveal overall genomic stability in long-term (∼6 months) polyclonal and clonal culture. One adipose stem cell clone displayed minor deletions in gene-rich telomeric and sub-telomeric regions on three chromosomes in early passage. This however, was detected only in a sub-population of cells that was subsequently spontaneously eliminated from the culture. Apparent pericentromeric instabilities are also occasionally detected in specific chromosomes. Our results indicate that clonal chromosomal aberrations may arise transiently in early passage adipose stem cells (ASC) cultures. Nonetheless, incidence of these aberrations seems to be negligible in the majority of long-term ASC cultures, at least under the culture conditions used here.
Long-term culture of mesenchymal stem cells leads to a loss of differentiation capacity, the molecular mechanism of which remains not understood. We show here that expansion of adipose stem cells (ASCs) to late passage (replicative senescence) is associated with promoter-specific and global changes in epigenetic histone modifications. In undifferentiated ASCs, inactive adipogenic and myogenic promoters are enriched in a repressive combination of trimethylated H3K4 (H3K4m3) and H3K27m3 in the absence of H3K9m3, a heterochromatin mark. Sequential chromatin immunoprecipitation assays indicate that H3K4m3 and H3K27m3 co-occupy a fraction of nucleosomes on some but not all lineage-specific promoters examined. However in cultured primary keratinocytes, adipogenic and myogenic promoters are enriched in trimethylated H3K4, K27, and K9, illustrating two distinct epigenetic states of inactive promoters related to potential for activation. H3K4m3 and H3K27m3 stably mark promoters during long-term ASC culture indicating that loss of differentiation capacity is not due to alterations in these histone modifications on these loci. Adipogenic differentiation in early passage results in H3K27 demethylation and H3K9 acetylation specifically on adipogenic promoters. On induction of differentiation in late passage, however, transcriptional upregulation is impaired, H3K27 trimethylation is maintained and H3K9 acetylation is inhibited on promoters. In addition, the polycomb proteins Ezh2 and Bmi1 are targeted to promoters. This correlates with global cellular Ezh2 increase and H3K9 deacetylation. Promoter targeting by Ezh2 and Bmi1 in late passage ASCs suggests the establishment of a polycomb-mediated epigenetic program aiming at repressing transcription.
Background: Potential therapeutic use of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) is likely to require large-scale in vitro expansion of the cells before transplantation. MSCs from adipose tissue can be cultured extensively until senescence. However, little is known on the differentiation potential of adipose stem cells (ASCs) upon extended culture and on associated epigenetic alterations. We examined the adipogenic differentiation potential of clones of human ASCs in early passage culture and upon senescence, and determined whether senescence was associated with changes in adipogenic promoter DNA methylation.
Inhibition of sclerostin, a glycoprotein secreted by osteocytes, offers a new therapeutic paradigm for treatment of osteoporosis (OP) through its critical role as Wnt/catenin signaling regulator. This study describes the epigenetic regulation of SOST expression in bone biopsies of postmenopausal women. We correlated serum sclerostin to bone mineral density (BMD), fractures, and bone remodeling parameters, and related these findings to epigenetic and genetic disease mechanisms. Serum sclerostin and bone remodeling biomarkers were measured in two postmenopausal groups: healthy (BMD T-score > -1) and established OP (BMD T-score < -2.5, with at least one low-energy fracture). Bone specimens were used to analyze SOST mRNAs, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), and DNA methylation changes. The SOST gene promoter region showed increased CpG methylation in OP patients (n ¼ 4) compared to age and body mass index (BMI) balanced controls (n ¼ 4) (80.5% versus 63.2%, p ¼ 0.0001) with replication in independent cohorts (n ¼ 27 and n ¼ 36, respectively). Serum sclerostin and bone SOST mRNA expression correlated positively with age-adjusted and BMIadjusted total hip BMD (r ¼ 0.47 and r ¼ 0.43, respectively; both p < 0.0005), and inversely to serum bone turnover markers. Five SNPs, one of which replicates in an independent population-based genomewide association study (GWAS), showed association with serum sclerostin or SOST mRNA levels under an additive model (p ¼ 0.0016 to 0.0079). Genetic and epigenetic changes in SOST influence its bone mRNA expression and serum sclerostin levels in postmenopausal women. The observations suggest that increased SOST promoter methylation seen in OP is a compensatory counteracting mechanism, which lowers serum sclerostin concentrations and reduces inhibition of Wnt signaling in an attempt to promote bone formation.
In vivo endothelial commitment of adipose stem cells (ASCs) has scarcely been reported, and controversy remains on the contribution of ASCs to vascularization. We address the epigenetic commitment of ASCs to the endothelial lineage. We report a bisulfite sequencing analysis of CpG methylation in the promoters of two endothelial-cell-specific genes, CD31 and CD144, in freshly isolated and in cultures of ASCs before and after induction of endothelial differentiation. In contrast to adipose tissue-derived endothelial STEM CELLS 2007; 25:852-861 Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest is found at the end of this article.
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