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Adipose-tissue-derived therapeutic cells in their natural environment as an autologous cell therapy strategy: the microtissue-stromal vascular fraction

  • The prerequisite for a successful clinical use of autologous adipose-tissue-derived cells is the highest possible regenerative potential of the applied cell population, the stromal vascular fraction (SVF). Current isolation methods depend on high enzyme concentration, lysis buffer, long incubation steps and mechanical stress, resulting in single cell dissociation. The aim of the study was to limit cell manipulation and obtain a derivative comprising therapeutic cells (microtissue-SVF) without dissociation from their natural extracellular matrix, by employing a gentle good manufacturing practice (GMP)-grade isolation. The microtissue-SVF yielded larger numbers of viable cells as compared to the improved standard-SVF, both with low enzyme concentration and minimal dead cell content. It comprised stromal tissue compounds (collagen, glycosaminoglycans, fibroblasts), capillaries and vessel structures (CD31+, smooth muscle actin+). A broad range of cell types was identified by surface-marker characterisation, including mesenchymal, haematopoietic, pericytic, blood and lymphatic vascular and epithelial cells. Subpopulations such as supra-adventitial adipose-derived stromal/stem cells and endothelial progenitor cells were significantly more abundant in the microtissue-SVF, corroborated by significantly higher potency for angiogenic tube-like structure formation in vitro. The microtissue-SVF showed the characteristic phenotype and tri-lineage mesenchymal differentiation potential in vitro and an immunomodulatory and pro-angiogenic secretome. In vivo implantation of the microtissue-SVF combined with fat demonstrated successful graft integration in nude mice. The present study demonstrated a fast and gentle isolation by minor manipulation of liposuction material, achieving a therapeutically relevant cell population with high vascularisation potential and immunomodulatory properties still embedded in a fraction of its original matrix.

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Metadaten
Author:Wolfgang HolnthonerORCiD
Parent Title (English):Eur Cell Mater.
Document Type:Article
Language:English
Completed Date:2019/02/22
Date of first Publication:2020/11/27
Responsibility for metadata:Fachhochschule Technikum Wien
Release Date:2020/11/27
GND Keyword:Adipose-tissue; autologous cell therapy; microtissue; stromal vascular fraction; vascularization
Volume:2019
Issue:Feb, 37
First Page:113
Last Page:133
Publish on Website:1
Open Access:0
Reviewed:1
Link to Publication:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30793275/
Department:Department Life Science Engineering
Research Focus:Tissue Engineering & Molecular Life Science Technologies
Projects:Eigenmittel
Studienjahr:2018/2019