Sodium lactate promotes stemness of human mesenchymal stem cells through KDM6B mediated glycolytic metabolism

2020 
Abstract Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are an important cell source for tissue homeostasis and repair due to their stemness characteristic. Lots of intrinsic signaling pathways have been reported to regulate MSC stemness, but the extrinsic signals such as sodium lactate, particularly in physiological conditions, are poorly understood. Herein, we evaluated the effect of sodium lactate on human MSC stemness regulation by examining colony-forming ability, energy metabolism, multi-lineage differentiation ability, and pluripotent gene and protein expression. The underlying mechanism was further investigated with gene knockdown as well as small molecule interference and rescue experiments. We found that: (1) low concentration (1 mM) of sodium lactate promoted the stemness of human MSCs; (2) the upregulation of glycolysis was responsible for the MSC stemness promotion; (3) lysine demethylase 6B (KDM6B) was the key regulator which mediated sodium lactate-induced glycolysis and human MSC stemness enhancement. This study indicated that sodium lactate played an important role in human MSC stemness maintenance in physiological conditions, which could be related to KDM6B mediated metabolic regulation. It would provide new insight into stem cell biology, and contribute to cell transplantation and tissue regeneration strategies.
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