Direct isolation of human central nervous system stem cells

Nobuko Uchida(StemCells (United States)), David Buck(StemCells (United States)), Dongping He(StemCells (United States)), Michael J. Reitsma(StemCells (United States)), Marilyn Masek(StemCells (United States)), Thinh V. Phan(StemCells (United States)), Ann Tsukamoto(StemCells (United States)), Fred H. Gage(StemCells (United States)), Irving L. Weissman(StemCells (United States))
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
December 19, 2000
Cited by 1,835Open Access

Abstract

Stem cells, which are clonogenic cells with self-renewal and multilineage differentiation properties, have the potential to replace or repair damaged tissue. We have directly isolated clonogenic human central nervous system stem cells (hCNS-SC) from fresh human fetal brain tissue, using antibodies to cell surface markers and fluorescence-activated cell sorting. These hCNS-SC are phenotypically 5F3 (CD133)(+), 5E12(+), CD34(-), CD45(-), and CD24(-/lo). Single CD133(+) CD34(-) CD45(-) sorted cells initiated neurosphere cultures, and the progeny of clonogenic cells could differentiate into both neurons and glial cells. Single cells from neurosphere cultures initiated from CD133(+) CD34(-) CD45(-) cells were again replated as single cells and were able to reestablish neurosphere cultures, demonstrating the self-renewal potential of this highly enriched population. Upon transplantation into brains of immunodeficient neonatal mice, the sorted/expanded hCNS-SC showed potent engraftment, proliferation, migration, and neural differentiation.


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