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TISSUE-SPECIFIC STEM CELLS |
aDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA;
bDepartment of Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Key Words. Mesenchymal stem cells • Differentiation • Three-dimensional • Patterning
Correspondence: Correspondence: Christopher S. Chen, M.D., Ph.D., 510 Skirkanich Hall, 210 South 33rd Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, USA. Telephone: 215-746-1750; Fax: 215-746-1752; e-mail: chrischen{at}seas.upenn.edu
Received on May 1, 2008;
accepted for publication on August 5, 2008.
First published online in STEM CELLS EXPRESS August 14, 2008.
The ability of stem cells to differentiate into specified lineages in the appropriate locations is vital to morphogenesis and adult tissue regeneration. Although soluble signals are important regulators of patterned differentiation, here we show that gradients of mechanical forces can also drive patterning of lineages. In the presence of soluble factors permitting osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation, human mesenchymal stem cells at the edge of multicellular islands differentiate into the osteogenic lineage, whereas those in the center became adipocytes. Interestingly, changing the shape of the multicellular sheet modulated the locations of osteogenic versus adipogenic differentiation. Measuring traction forces revealed gradients of stress that preceded and mirrored the patterns of differentiation, where regions of high stress resulted in osteogenesis, whereas stem cells in regions of low stress differentiated to adipocytes. Inhibiting cytoskeletal tension suppressed the relative degree of osteogenesis versus adipogenesis, and this spatial patterning of differentiation was also present in three-dimensional multicellular clusters. These findings demonstrate a role for mechanical forces in linking multicellular organization to spatial differentials of cell differentiation, and they represent an important guiding principle in tissue patterning that could be exploited in stem cell-based therapies.
Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest is found at the end of this article.
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