• Title of article

    Differentiation of human bone marrow-derived cells into buccal epithelial cells in vivo: a molecular analytical study

  • Author/Authors

    Simon D Tran، نويسنده , , Stanley R Pillemer، نويسنده , , Amalia Dutra، نويسنده , , A John Barrett، نويسنده , , Michael J Brownstein، نويسنده , , Sharon Key، نويسنده , , Evgenia Pak، نويسنده , , Rose Anne Leakan، نويسنده , , Albert Kingman، نويسنده , , Kenneth M. Yamada، نويسنده , , Bruce J. Baum، نويسنده , , Eva Mezey، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    5
  • From page
    1084
  • To page
    1088
  • Abstract
    Background Adult bone marrow-derived (BMD) cells could be used to repair damaged organs and tissues, but the intrinsic plasticity of these cells has been questioned by results of in-vitro studies suggesting that such cells might fuse with other cells giving the appearance of differentiation. We aimed to determine whether fusion events are important in vivo. Methods To test whether BMD cells can colonise an epithelial tissue and differentiate there without fusion, we did in-situ hybridisation with Y and X chromosome probes labelled with 35-sulphur or digoxigenin, or labelled fluorescently. We did immunohistochemistry with anticytokeratin 13 along with fluorescence in-situ hybridisation to identify Y-chromosome positive buccal epithelial cells in cheek scrapings obtained from five females who had received either a bone-marrow transplant or an allogeneic mobilised peripheral-blood progenitor-cell transplant (enriched in CD34+ cells) from male donors. Findings When examined 4–6 years after male-to-female marrow-cell transplantation, all female recipients had Y-chromosome-positive buccal cells (0•8–12•7%). In more than 9700 cells studied, we detected only one XXXY-positive cell (0•01%) and one XXY cell (0•01%), both of which could have arisen when an XY cell fused with an XX cell. Interpretation Male BMD cells migrate into the cheek and differentiate into epithelial cells, an occurrence that does not depend on fusion of BMD cells to recipient cells. This finding might be an example of transdifferentiation of haemopoietic or stromal progenitor cells. Plasticity of BMD cells could be useful in regenerative medicine.
  • Journal title
    The Lancet
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    The Lancet
  • Record number

    558654