Effect of heparin addition on expansion of cord blood hematopoietic progenitor cells in three-dimensional coculture with stromal cells in nonwoven fabrics.
2005
Primary human cord blood mononuclear cells (CB MNCs) were inoculated into layers of primary human bone marrow stromal cells prepared in a nonwoven fabric porous carrier [three dimensional (3-D)] or on a dish [two dimensional (2-D)] using a cytokine-free medium and were cultured for 7 days with or without the addition of heparin. The number of progenitor cells increased threefold during the 3-D coculture, whereas it decreased in the 2-D culture. Heparin addition to the 3-D coculture further increased the number of progenitors twofold, whereas the addition of desulfated heparin had no effect. The heparin effect was also observed in a 3-D culture of CB MNCs without stromal cells when conditioned medium was employed. The coating of the carrier with N-(O-β-(6-O-sulfogalactopyranosyl)-6-oxyhexyl)-3,5-bis (dodecyloxy)-benzamide instead of heparin addition also increased the number of progenitor cells in the 3-D culture of CB MNCs without stromal cells when the conditioned medium was employed. The 3-D coculture constructed with nonwoven fabrics and stromal cells was clearly superior to the 2-D culture because of the expansion of CB hematopoietic progenitor cells without cytokine addition. Heparin addition to the 3-D coculture further increased the number of progenitor cells, which may result from a synergistic effect of soluble cytokines produced by stromal cells with the sulfur group of heparin.
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