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Revista Cubana de Hematología, Inmunología y Hemoterapia
versión On-line ISSN 1561-2996
Resumen
MACIAS-ABRAHAM, Consuelo et al. Phenotypic characterization of the bone marrow stem cells used in regenerative cellular therapy. Rev Cubana Hematol Inmunol Hemoter [online]. 2011, vol.27, n.2, pp. 233-243. ISSN 1561-2996.
Regenerative medicine is a novel therapeutic method with broad potential for the treatment of various illnesses, based on the use of bone marrow (BM) stem cells, whose phenotypic characterization is limited. The paper deals with the expression of different cell membrane markers in mononuclear BM cells from 14 patients who underwent autologous cell therapy, obtained by medullary puncture and mobilization to peripheral blood, with the purpose of characterizing the different types of cells present in that heterogeneous cellular population and identifying the adhesion molecules involved in their adhesion. A greater presence was observed of adherent stem cells from the marrow stroma in mononuclear cells obtained directly from the BM; a larger population of CD90+ cells in mononuclear cells from CD34-/CD45- peripheral blood with a high expression of molecules CD44 and CD62L, which suggests a greater presence of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) in mobilized cells from the marrow stroma. The higher levels of CD34+ cells in peripheral blood stem cells with a low expression of molecules CD117- and DR- suggests the presence of hematopoietic stem cells, hemangioblasts and progenitor endothelial cells mobilized to peripheral circulation. It was found that mononuclear cells from both the BM and peripheral blood show a high presence of stem cells with expression of adhesion molecule CD44 (MMC marker), probably involved in their migration, settling and differentiation.
Palabras clave : Stem cells; progenitor cells; regenerative medicine; mesenchymal cells; endothelial cells.