Naïve pluripotent-like characteristics of non-tumorigenic Muse cells isolated from human amniotic membrane

7Citations
Citations of this article
8Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Multilineage-differentiating stress-enduring (Muse) cells are non-tumorigenic pluripotent-like stem cells that exhibit triploblastic differentiation and self-renewability at the single-cell level, and are collectable as pluripotent surface marker SSEA-3(+) from the bone marrow (BM), peripheral blood, and organ connective tissues. SSEA-3(+) cells from human amniotic membrane mesenchymal stem cells (hAMSCs) were compared with hBM-Muse cells. Similar to hBM-Muse cells, hAMSC-SSEA-3(+) cells expressed pluripotency genes (OCT3/4, NANOG, and SOX2), differentiated into triploblastic cells from a single cell, self-renewed, and exhibited non-tumorigenicity. Notably, however, they exhibited unique characteristics not seen in hBM-Muse cells, including higher expression of genes related to germline- and extraembryonic cell-lineages compared with those in hBM-Muse cells in single-cell RNA-sequencing; and enhanced expression of markers relevant to germline- (PRDM14, TFAP2C, and NANOS3) and extraembryonic cell- (CDX2, GCM1, and ID2) lineages when induced by cytokine subsets, suggesting a broader differentiation potential similar to naïve pluripotent stem cells. t-SNE dimensionality reduction and Gene ontology analysis visualized hAMSC-SSEA-3(+) cells comprised a large undifferentiated subpopulation between epithelial- and mesenchymal-cell states and a small mesenchymal subpopulation expressing genes relevant to the placental formation. The AM is easily accessible by noninvasive approaches. These unique cells are a potentially interesting target naïve pluripotent stem cell-like resource without tumorigenicity.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Ogawa, E., Oguma, Y., Kushida, Y., Wakao, S., Okawa, K., & Dezawa, M. (2022). Naïve pluripotent-like characteristics of non-tumorigenic Muse cells isolated from human amniotic membrane. Scientific Reports, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-22282-1

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free