Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4262314 Transplantation Proceedings 2008 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

We directly injected porcine donor mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) into murine bone marrow (BM) cavities to examine the effects of intra-BM cotransplantation of MSC in pig-to–NOD/SCID mouse bone marrow transplantation (BMT) on xenogeneic engraftment. Porcine MSC prepared by aspiration of iliac BM of miniature swine were identified as CD90+CD29+CD45−CD31- and shown to differentiate into osteoblastocytes and adipocytes. A few weeks after expansion, MSC (1 × 106 cells/mouse) were directly injected with BM cells (30 × 106 cells/mouse) obtained from vertebrae through a microsyringe into BM cavities of both tibiae of NOD/SCID mice after 3-Gy total body irradiation. Controls were injected with only BM cells. Porcine chimerisms of BM cells of tibiae (injection site) and of femurs (non-injection site) in recipient mice were evaluated with porcine and murine cell markers using FACS. The chimerism of porcine class I+ cells at the injection site in the MSC group and the controls were 3.45%, 1.43%, and 0.17%, and 2.27%, 0.81%, and 0.1% at 1, 3, and 6 weeks, respectively. The chimerism at the noninjection site in the MSC group and the controls were 0.21%, 1.34%, and 0.11%, and 0.06%, 0.42%, and 0.09% at 1, 3, and 6 weeks, respectively. The total chimerisms of injection site in the MSC group to 6 weeks were significantly higher than those in the control group (1.60% vs 0.99%; P < .05), whereas the chimerism of the noninjection site in MSC group was remarkably higher at 3 weeks. In conclusion, intra-BM cotransplantation of porcine donor MSC in pig-to–NOD/SCID mouse BMT improved short-term xenogeneic engraftment, presumably due to humoral factors.

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