The Immunogenicity of Human Adipose‐Derived Cells: Temporal Changes In Vitro

Kevin R. McIntosh, Sanjin Zvonic(Pennington Biomedical Research Center), Sara M. Garrett, James B. Mitchell, Z. Elizabeth Floyd(Pennington Biomedical Research Center), Lora Hammill, Amy L. Kloster, Yuan Di C. Halvorsen(Sepragen Corporation (United States)), Jenny P.‐Y. Ting(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Robert W. Storms(Duke Medical Center), Brian C. Goh(Pennington Biomedical Research Center), Gail Kilroy(Pennington Biomedical Research Center), Xiying Wu, Jeffrey M. Gimble(Duke Medical Center)
Stem Cells
January 13, 2006
Cited by 590Open Access
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Abstract

Regenerative medical techniques will require an abundant source of human adult stem cells that can be readily available at the point of care. The ability to use unmatched allogeneic stem cells will help achieve this goal. Since adipose tissue represents an untapped reservoir of human cells, we have compared the immunogenic properties of freshly isolated, collagenase-digested human adipose tissue-derived stromal vascular fraction cells (SVFs) relative to passaged, plastic-adherent adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs). Parallel studies have shown that adherence to plastic and subsequent expansion of human adipose-derived cells selects for a relatively homogeneous cell population based on immunophenotype. Consistent with these findings, the presence of hematopoietic-associated markers (CD11a, CD14, CD45, CD86, and histocompatible locus antigen-DR [HLA-DR]) detected on the heterogeneous SVF cell population decreased upon subsequent passage of the ASCs. In mixed lymphocyte reactions (MLRs), SVFs, and early passage ASCs stimulated proliferation by allogeneic responder T cells. In contrast, the ASCs beyond passage P1 failed to elicit a response from T cells. Indeed, late passage ASCs actually suppressed the MLR response. Although these results support the feasibility of allogeneic human ASC transplantation, confirmatory in vivo animal studies will be required.


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