Immortalization without neoplastic transformation of human mesenchymal stem cells by transduction with HPV16 E6/E7 genes

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Abstract

hMSCs derived from bone marrow are useful as a species-specific cell culture system for studying cell lineage differentiation and tissue remodeling. However, hMSCs usually have a short in vitro life span due to replicative senescence. We therefore used a high dose of retroviral vector LXSN-I6E6E7 to transduce hMSCs of an aging donor and obtained an actively proliferating cell line, designated KP-hMSCs, which expressed HPV16 E6/E7 mRNA. Whereas parental hMSCs ceased to grow after 30 PDs, KP-hMSCs could be propagated beyond 100 PDs. With culture procedures to avoid selection pressure and crowded cell growth, KP-hMSCs showed no signs of neoplastic transformation as examined by soft-agar anchorage-independent growth and NOD-SCID mouse tumorigenicity assays. KP-hMSCs gave similar cytofluorimetric profiles of 31 CD markers to those of the parental primary hMSCs, except with some morphologic changes and expansion of an originally very minor CD34dlmCD38+CD50+ cell population. Upon exposure to specific stimulating conditions in vitro, KP-hMSCs could respond and differentiate along the mesenchymal (bone, fat and cartilage) and nonmesenchymal (neuron) cell lineages. Our results indicated that hMSCs could be immortalized by transduction with HPV16 E6/E7, maintained without neoplastic transformation by careful culture procedures and thus useful for stem cell research and clinical application. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Hung, S. C., Yang, D. M., Chang, C. F., Lin, R. J., Wang, J. S., Low-Tone Ho, L., & Yang, W. K. (2004). Immortalization without neoplastic transformation of human mesenchymal stem cells by transduction with HPV16 E6/E7 genes. International Journal of Cancer, 110(3), 313–319. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.20126

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