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Isolation and biological characterization of chicken amnion epithelial cells
Author(s) -
Yuhua Gao,
Yun Pu,
Dajiang Wang,
Lingling Hou,
Wei Guan,
Yuzhen Ma
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
european journal of histochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.754
H-Index - 42
eISSN - 2038-8306
pISSN - 1121-760X
DOI - 10.4081/ejh.2012.e33
Subject(s) - amniotic epithelial cells , homeobox protein nanog , endoderm , ectoderm , stem cell , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , amniotic stem cells , induced pluripotent stem cell , mesoderm , amnion , cellular differentiation , multipotent stem cell , embryonic stem cell , adult stem cell , in vitro , embryo , endothelial stem cell , progenitor cell , embryogenesis , fetus , biochemistry , pregnancy , genetics , gene
Amniotic epithelial cells (AECs) express Oct4, Nanog and Sox-2, which are necessary for maintaining the undifferentiated state of pluripotent stem cells. AECs additionally express CK19, which is a specific marker of epithelial cells, both in vivo and in vitro. In this research, we investigated the biological characteristics and potential for cell therapy of AECs from 6-day-old chicken embryos. We induced the AECs to differentiate into pancreatic islet-like cells (endoderm), adipocytes and osteoblasts (mesoderm) and neural-like cells (ectoderm), and used immunofluorescence and RT-PCR to detect the expression of AECs specific markers. To assess the differentiation capacity of AECs, passage 3 cells were induced to differentiate into adipocytes, osteoblasts, pancreatic islet-like cells and neural-like cells. The AEC markers, Oct4, Nanog, Sox-2 and CK19, were all positively expressed. Cloning efficiency decreased with increasing passage number. Passage 3 AECs were successfully induced to differentiate into pancreatic islet-like cells, osteoblasts, adipocytes, and neural-like cells. These results suggested that AECs isolated from chicken embryos exhibited the characteristics of the multipotent stem cells. AECs may therefore be ideal candidates for cellular transplantation therapy and tissue engineering

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