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UCLA Researchers Transform Stem Cells
Found in Human Fat Into Smooth Muscle Cells
Discovery Impacts Tissue Engineering
for Intestine, Bladder and Vascular Systems
Researchers at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of
Engineering and Applied Science and the David Geffen School of
Medicine at UCLA today announced they have collaborated to transform
adult stem cells taken from human adipose – or fat tissue
– into smooth muscle cells, which help the normal function
of a multitude of organs like the intestine, bladder and arteries.
The study may help lead to the use of fat stem
cells for smooth muscle tissue engineering and repair.
Reported in the July 24 online edition of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the study is
one of the first to show that stem cells derived from adipose
tissue can be changed to acquire the physical and biochemical
characteristics as well as the functionality of smooth muscle
cells.
Smooth muscle cells are found within the human
body in the walls of hollow organs like blood vessels, bladder
and intestines and contract and expand to help transport blood,
urine, and waste through the body’s system.
“Fat tissue may prove a reliable source
of smooth muscle cells that we can use to regenerate and repair
damaged organs,” said Dr. Larissa V. Rodriguez, principal
investigator and assistant professor, Department of Urology, David
Geffen School of Medicine.
Rodriguez and her team first cultured the adipose-derived
stem cells in a growth factor cocktail that encouraged the cells
to transform into smooth muscle cells. Researchers observed the
genetic expression and development of proteins, which are specific
to this type of cell. So it looked like a smooth muscle cell,
but would it act like one?
The next step required testing functionality to
see if the cells would contract like smooth muscle tissue. Rodriguez
turned to associate professor of bioengineering Dr. Benjamin Wu
at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
for help.
Wu’s team developed a special device to
evaluate the cells’ ability to contract by tracking movement
of microbeads dispersed in a collagen gel embedded with the cells.
Researchers added different pharmacologic agents known to cause
contraction or relaxation in smooth muscle.
“We found that the cells did indeed function
just like smooth muscle,” said Wu. “The new device
allowed us to evaluate drug-induced changes in the physical properties
of smooth muscle at the cell level – previously we’ve
needed tissue samples to observe this phenomena.”
To make sure they could reproduce the smooth muscle
cells and to confirm the transformation, Rodriguez and her team
cloned one of the primitive stem cells from the adipose tissue
and repeated the experiments on a cloned population of cells with
similar results.
“We wanted to make sure it wasn’t
an isolated case or particular conditions in the cell culures
that allowed us to create or select out already existing smooth
muscle cells,” ” said Rodriguez, also a member of
the UCLA Stem Cell Institute. “We are surprised and pleased
with the results and are excited about future applications.”
Rodriguez notes the many advantages of using a
patients’ own fat stem cells for organ re-growth and tissue
regeneration, including no need for anti-rejection medications.
In patients with a diseased or absent organ, who cannot use their
own organ tissue for regeneration, adipose stem cells offer an
alternative.
Smooth muscle cells have also been produced from
stem cells found in the brain and bone marrow, but acquiring stem
cells from adipose tissue is much easier and most patients have
adipose tissue readily available, according to Rodriguez.
The next step, she adds, involves identifying
and developing the growth factors that will induce transformation
of cells more quickly. She is also starting to use smooth muscle
cells for tissue engineering in the urinary tract, including the
urethra.
The study was funded by the National Institute
of Child Health and Human Development Building Interdisciplinary
Research Careers in Women’s Health, the American Geriatrics
Society Jahnigen Career Development Scholars Award and the National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
Other UCLA authors include: Zeni Alfonso and Rong
Zhang from the Department of Urology, David Geffen School of Medicine
at UCLA; Joanne Leung from the UCLA Department of Bioengineering
and Louis J. Ignarro, UCLA Department of Molecular and Medical
Pharmacology.
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