Prolonged cultivation enhances the stimulatory activity of hiPSC mesenchymal progenitor-derived conditioned medium

Marolt Presen D, Goeschl V, Hanetseder D, Ogrin L, Stetco AL, Tansek A, Pozenel L, Bruszel B, Mitulovic G, Oesterreicher J, Zipperle J, Schaedl B, Holnthoner W, Grillari J, Redl H. 2024. Prolonged cultivation enhances the stimulatory activity of hiPSC mesenchymal progenitor-derived conditioned medium. Stem Cell Research and Therapy. 15, 434.

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Author
Marolt Presen, Darja; Goeschl, Vanessa; Hanetseder, Dominik; Ogrin, Laura; Stetco, Alexandra Larissa; Tansek, Anja; Pozenel, Laura; Bruszel, BellaISTA; Mitulovic, Goran; Oesterreicher, Johannes; Zipperle, Johannes; Schaedl, Barbara
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Abstract
Background: Human induced pluripotent stem cells represent a scalable source of youthful tissue progenitors and secretomes for regenerative therapies. The aim of our study was to investigate the potential of conditioned medium (CM) from hiPSC-mesenchymal progenitors (hiPSC-MPs) to stimulate osteogenic differentiation of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). We also investigated whether prolonged cultivation or osteogenic pre-differentiation of hiPSC-MPs could enhance the stimulatory activity of CM. Methods: MSCs were isolated from 13 donors (age 20–90 years). CM derived from hiPSC-MPs was added to the MSC cultures and the effects on proliferation and osteogenic differentiation were examined after 14 days and 6 weeks. The stimulatory activity of hiPSC-MP-CM was compared with the activity of MSC-derived CM and with the activity of CM prepared from hiPSC-MPs pre-cultured in growth or osteogenic medium for 14 days. Comparative proteomic analysis of CM was performed to gain insight into the molecular components responsible for the stimulatory activity. Results: Primary bone marrow-derived MSC exhibited variability, with a tendency towards lower proliferation and tri-lineage differentiation in older donors. hiPSC-MP-CM increased the proliferation and alkaline phosphatase activity of MSC from several adult/aged donors after 14 days of continuous supplementation under osteogenic conditions. However, CM supplementation failed to improve the mineralization of MSC pellets after 6 weeks under osteogenic conditions. hiPSC-MP-CM showed greater enhancement of proliferation and ALP activity than CM derived from bone marrow-derived MSCs. Moreover, 14-day cultivation but not osteogenic pre-differentiation of hiPSC-MPs strongly enhanced CM stimulatory activity. Quantitative proteomic analysis of d14-CM revealed a distinct profile of components that formed a highly interconnected associations network with two clusters, one functionally associated with binding and organization of actin/cytoskeletal components and the other with structural constituents of the extracellular matrix, collagen, and growth factor binding. Several hub proteins were identified that were reported to have functions in cell-extracellular matrix interaction, osteogenic differentiation and development. Conclusions: Our data show that hiPSC-MP-CM enhances early osteogenic differentiation of human bone marrow-derived MSCs and that prolonged cultivation of hiPSC-MPs enhances CM-stimulatory activity. Proteomic analysis of the upregulated protein components provides the basis for further optimization of hiPSC-MP-CM for bone regenerative therapies.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2024-12-01
Journal Title
Stem Cell Research and Therapy
Publisher
Springer Nature
Acknowledgement
We thank the personnel of the Lorenz-Böhler-Unfallkrankenhaus for providing the human tissue waste for primary cell isolation and the New York Stem Cell Foundation Research Institute for providing the human induced pluripotent stem cell line 1013 A and its mesenchymal progenitors. We also thank all our colleagues at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Traumatology for their suggestions and ongoing support of the project. InstaText writing tool (https://instatext.io) was used to edit the English language of the final manuscript. This work has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie actions (grant agreement No. 657716) and the Transforming European Industry call H2020-NMBP-TRIND-2020 (grant agreement No. 953134), as well as by the FFG Industrienahe Dissertation program (grant agreement No. 867803 and 853056), the FEMtech Praktika program (grant agreement No. 852154, 868917 and 877951) and the Production of the Future program (grant agreement No. 877452).
Volume
15
Article Number
434
eISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Marolt Presen D, Goeschl V, Hanetseder D, et al. Prolonged cultivation enhances the stimulatory activity of hiPSC mesenchymal progenitor-derived conditioned medium. Stem Cell Research and Therapy. 2024;15. doi:10.1186/s13287-024-03960-5
Marolt Presen, D., Goeschl, V., Hanetseder, D., Ogrin, L., Stetco, A. L., Tansek, A., … Redl, H. (2024). Prolonged cultivation enhances the stimulatory activity of hiPSC mesenchymal progenitor-derived conditioned medium. Stem Cell Research and Therapy. Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13287-024-03960-5
Marolt Presen, Darja, Vanessa Goeschl, Dominik Hanetseder, Laura Ogrin, Alexandra Larissa Stetco, Anja Tansek, Laura Pozenel, et al. “Prolonged Cultivation Enhances the Stimulatory Activity of HiPSC Mesenchymal Progenitor-Derived Conditioned Medium.” Stem Cell Research and Therapy. Springer Nature, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13287-024-03960-5.
D. Marolt Presen et al., “Prolonged cultivation enhances the stimulatory activity of hiPSC mesenchymal progenitor-derived conditioned medium,” Stem Cell Research and Therapy, vol. 15. Springer Nature, 2024.
Marolt Presen D, Goeschl V, Hanetseder D, Ogrin L, Stetco AL, Tansek A, Pozenel L, Bruszel B, Mitulovic G, Oesterreicher J, Zipperle J, Schaedl B, Holnthoner W, Grillari J, Redl H. 2024. Prolonged cultivation enhances the stimulatory activity of hiPSC mesenchymal progenitor-derived conditioned medium. Stem Cell Research and Therapy. 15, 434.
Marolt Presen, Darja, et al. “Prolonged Cultivation Enhances the Stimulatory Activity of HiPSC Mesenchymal Progenitor-Derived Conditioned Medium.” Stem Cell Research and Therapy, vol. 15, 434, Springer Nature, 2024, doi:10.1186/s13287-024-03960-5.
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