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Title

Human endometrial stem cell neurogenesis in response to NGF and bFGF.

Authors

Noureddini, Mahdi; Verdi, Javad; Mortazavi-Tabatabaei, Seyed Abdolreza; Sharif, Shiva; Azimi, Alireza; Keyhanvar, Peyman; Shoae-Hassani, Alireza

Abstract

The potential of cell therapy is promising in nerve regeneration, but is limited by ethical considerations about the proper and technically safe source of stem cells. We report the successful differentiation of human EnSCs (endometrial stem cells) as a rich source of renewable and safe progenitors into high-efficiency cholinergic neurons. The extracellular signals of NGF (nerve growth factor) and bFGF (basic fibroblast growth factor) could induce cholinergic neuron differentiation. ChAT (choline acetyltransferase), MAP2 (microtubule associated protein 2) and NF-l (neurofilament L) increased after administration of bFGF and NGF to the EnSC cultures. trkC and FGFR2 (fibroblast growth factor receptor 2), which belong to the NGF and bFGF receptors respectively, were determined in populations of EnSCs. NGF, bFGF and their combination differentially influenced human EnSCs high efficiency differentiation. By inducing cholinergic neurons from EnSCs in a chemically defined medium, we could produce human neural cells without resorting to primary culture of neurons. This in vitro method provides an unlimited source of human neural cells and facilitates clinical applications of EnSCs for neurological diseases.

Subjects

DEVELOPMENTAL neurobiology; ENDOMETRIUM; STEM cells; NERVE growth factor; NERVOUS system regeneration; NEURONS

Publication

Cell Biology International, 2012, Vol 36, Issue 10, p961

ISSN

1065-6995

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1042/CBI20110610

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