Fluorescence-Activated Cell Sorting Is More Potent to Fish Intervertebral Disk Progenitor Cells Than Magnetic and Beads-Based Methods

Daniela A. Frauchiger, Adel Tekari, Rahel D. May, Emina Džafo, Samantha C.W. Chan, Jivko Stoyanov, Alessandro Bertolo, Xingshuo Zhang, Julien Guerrero, Daisuke Sakai, Jordy Schol, Sibylle Grad, Marianna Tryfonidou, Lorin M. Benneker, Benjamin Gantenbein

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    Low back pain related to intervertebral disk (IVD) degeneration has a major socioeconomic impact on our aging society. Therefore, stem cell therapy to activate self-repair of the IVD remains an exciting treatment strategy. In this respect, tissue-specific progenitors may play a crucial role in IVD regeneration, as these cells are perfectly adapted to this niche. Such a rare progenitor cell population residing in the nucleus pulposus (NP) (NP progenitor cells [NPPCs]) was found positive for the angiopoietin-1 receptor (Tie2+), and was demonstrated to possess self-renewal capacity and in vitro multipotency. Here, we compared three sorting protocols; that is, fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS), and a mesh-based label-free cell sorting system (pluriSelect), with respect to cell yield, potential to form colonies (colony-forming units), and in vitro functional differentiation assays for tripotency. The aim of this study was to demonstrate the efficiency of three widespread cell sorting methods for picking rare cells (<5%) and how these isolated cells then behave in downstream functional differentiation in adipogenesis, osteogenesis, and chondrogenesis. The cell yields among the isolation methods differed widely, with FACS presenting the highest yield (5.0% ± 4.0%), followed by MACS (1.6% ± 2.9%) and pluriSelect (1.1% ± 1.0%). The number of colonies formed was not significantly different between Tie2+ and Tie2− NPPCs. Only FACS was able to separate into two functionally different populations that showed trilineage multipotency, while MACS and pluriSelect failed to maintain a clear separation between Tie2+ and Tie2− populations in differentiation assays. To conclude, the isolation of NPPCs was possible with all three sorting methods, while FACS was the preferred technique for separation of functional Tie2+ cells.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)571-580
    Number of pages10
    JournalTissue Engineering - Part C: Methods
    Volume25
    Issue number10
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 9 Sept 2019

    Keywords

    • cell sorting
    • tissue-specific stem cells
    • rare cells
    • nucleus pulposus progenitor cell,
    • Tie2
    • angiopoietin-1 receptor

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