4.7 Article

Isolation, Culture and Comprehensive Characterization of Biological Properties of Human Urine-Derived Stem Cells

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms222212503

Keywords

urine-derived stem cells; biological characteristics; morphology; differentiation capacity; stemness; cytokine profile

Funding

  1. Operational Programme Integrated Infrastructure - European Regional Development Fund [ITMS2014+: 313011V358]

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The study successfully isolated UDSCs and analyzed their morphological, surface marker, cell doubling time, and cell shape characteristics. The results showed that UDSCs have the potential for regenerating damaged tissues.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) represent an attractive source within the field of tissue engineering. However, their harvesting often requires invasive medical procedures. Urine-derived stem cells (UDSCs) display similar properties to MSCs, and their obtention and further processing is non-invasive for the donors as well as low cost. Here, we offer a comprehensive analysis of their biological properties. The goal of this study was to analyze their morphology, sternness, differentiation potential and cytokine profile. We have successfully isolated UDSCs from 25 urine samples. First colonies emerged up to 9 days after the initial seeding. Cell doubling time was 45 +/- 0.24 SD, and when seeded at the density of 100 cells/cm(2), they formed 42 +/- 6.5 SD colonies within 10 days. Morphological analyzes revealed that two different types of the cell populations have been present. The first type had a rice-grain shape and the second one was characterized by a polyhedral shape. In several cell cultures, dome-shaped cells were observed as well. All examined UDSCs expressed typical MSC-like surface markers, CD73, CD90 and CD105. Moreover, conditioned media from UDSCs were harvested, and cytokine profile has been evaluated showing a significantly higher secretory rate of IL-8, IL-6 and chemokines MCP-1 and GM-CSF. We have also successfully induced human UDSCs into chondrogenic, osteogenic and myogenic cell lineages. Our findings indicate that UDSCs might have immense potential in the regeneration of the damaged tissues.

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