Transcriptional profiling of early differentiation of primary human mesenchymal stem cells into chondrocytes

2021 
Articular cartilage has only very limited regenerative capacities in humans. Tissue engineering techniques for cartilage damage repair are limited in the production of hyaline cartilage. Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) are multipotent stem cells and can be differentiated into mature cartilage cells, chondrocytes, which could be used for repairing damaged cartilage. Chondrogenesis is a highly complex, relatively inefficient process lasting over 3 weeks in vitro. In order to better understand chondrogenic differentiation, especially the commitment phase, we have performed transcriptional profiling of MSC differentiation into chondrocytes from early timepoints starting 15 minutes after induction to 16 hours and fully differentiated chondrocytes at 21 days. Transcriptional gene regulatory networks (GRN) were identified using time-course clustering and upstream-regulator predictions which revealed that cells start epigenetic reprogramming as early as 2 hours after induction and commit to differentiation within 4-6 hours. After that they adapt their gene expression to cater for differentiation specific protein production. These results suggest that interventions to improve the frequency and efficiency of differentiation should target early processes.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    46
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []