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Meflin defines mesenchymal stem cells and/or their early progenitors with multilineage differentiation capacity
Author(s) -
Hara Akitoshi,
Kato Katsuhiro,
Ishihara Toshikazu,
Kobayashi Hiroki,
Asai Naoya,
Mii Shinji,
Shiraki Yukihiro,
Miyai Yuki,
Ando Ryota,
Mizutani Yasuyuki,
Iida Tadashi,
Takefuji Mikito,
Murohara Toyoaki,
Takahashi Masahide,
Enomoto Atsushi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
genes to cells
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.912
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1365-2443
pISSN - 1356-9597
DOI - 10.1111/gtc.12855
Subject(s) - mesenchymal stem cell , biology , progenitor cell , microbiology and biotechnology , cellular differentiation , stem cell , lineage markers , stromal cell , bone marrow , adipogenesis , immunology , cancer research , genetics , gene
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are the likely precursors of multiple lines of mesenchymal cells. The existence of bona fide MSCs with self‐renewal capacity and differentiation potential into all mesenchymal lineages, however, has been unclear because of the lack of MSC‐specific marker(s) that are not expressed by the terminally differentiated progeny. Meflin, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol‐anchored protein, is an MSC marker candidate that is specifically expressed in rare stromal cells in all tissues. Our previous report showed that Meflin expression becomes down‐regulated in bone marrow‐derived MSCs cultured on plastic, making it difficult to examine the self‐renewal and differentiation of Meflin‐positive cells at the single‐cell level. Here, we traced the lineage of Meflin‐positive cells in postnatal and adult mice, showing that those cells differentiated into white and brown adipocytes, osteocytes, chondrocytes and skeletal myocytes. Interestingly, cells derived from Meflin‐positive cells formed clusters of differentiated cells, implying the in situ proliferation of Meflin‐positive cells or their lineage‐committed progenitors. These results, taken together with previous findings that Meflin expression in cultured MSCs was lost upon their multilineage differentiation, suggest that Meflin is a useful potential marker to localize MSCs and/or their immature progenitors in multiple tissues.

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