The Effects of Chronological Age on the Chondrogenic Potential of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
- In vitro studies involving adult human subjects;
- Studies with a reference to subjects’ age;
- Studies looking at MSCs and the source of extraction of cells specified;
- Studies that refer to chondrogenic differentiation;
- English language.
2.3. Exclusion Criteria
- Duplicate studies;
- Those not in the English language;
- Non-human studies;
- Studies using samples from patients with systemic diseases;
- Any paper other than research papers was excluded;
- Studies looking at non-mesenchymal cells, e.g., embryonic, umbilical cord, and periodontal MSCs.
2.4. Data Extraction
2.5. Quality Assessment
3. Results
3.1. General Characteristics of the Papers
3.2. Proliferation of MSCs
References | Brief Description of Study | Source of MSCs | Number of Subjects | Age | Culture Conditions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scharstuhl et al., 2007 [56] | BM-MSCs were isolated from the femoral shaft at total hip replacement. | BM
| 98 | 24–92 years | In total, 25 mL of BM was collected, and the mononuclear cell fraction isolated through density gradient centrifugation. After 48 h, non-adherent cells were removed. |
Stolzing et al., 2008 [60] | Investigated MSC from donors of various ages and determined their “fitness” by measuring various age and senescence markers in relation to their differentiation capacity and functionality. | BM
| 57 | Group I: 19–40 years old—“adult” group, Group II: >40 years old—“aged” group used in our analyses. Group III: 7–18 years old—“young” group not included in our review. | Lympho-prep was used for BM MNC separation and cryopreservation in liquid nitrogen. In the CFU-f test, 5 × 106 BM MNCs were initially plated. Subsequent passages of MSCs were cultured at 1 × 106 cells in T75 culture flasks. |
Alm, J. J. et al., 2010 [61] | The study examined MSCs in fracture patients looking at cell surface markers, proliferation through several passages as well as osteogenic, chondrogenic and adipogenic differentiation. | BM
| 41 | Group I: (76–95) Group II: (75–85) (19–60) | MNCs isolated, plated at 2 × 106 (BM) or 5 × 106 (PB) cells in 25-cm2 flasks. Non-adherent cells discarded after 48 h. Cells trypsinized after 14–21 days and re-plated at 1000 cells/cm2 in flasks. |
Fickert et al., 2011 [62] | The study investigated the influence of donor age on proliferation and osteogenic differentiation in long-term ex vivo cultures of primary human MSCs from patients in different age groups. | BM
| 15 | Group I: <50 yearsGroup II: 50–65 yearsGroup III: >65 years | Density gradient used and MNCs isolated. |
Alt, E. U. et al., 2012 [63] | Adipose-tissue-derived MSCs (ASCs) were isolated from young, middle age, and aged healthy volunteers to investigate the effect of ageing on the self-renewal and differentiation potential of ASCs | ASCs
| 40 | 15–71 Group I: <20 yearsGroup II: 30–40 yearsGroup III: >50 years | In total, 50 g tissue digested with collagenase I, RBC lysis buffer used. ASCs From three groups plated at densities of 1000 to 25 cells/cm2 in 12-well dishes. Analysis at day 10. |
Siegel et al., 2013 [64] | BM-MSCs were assessed for phenotype, in vitro growth, colony formation, telomerase activity, differentiation capacity, T cell proliferation suppression, cytokine and trophic factor secretion, and receptor expression. Expression of Oct4, Nanog, Prdm14, and SOX2 mRNA was compared to pluripotent stem cells. | BM | 53 | 13–80 years | Isolated mononuclear cells seeded at 1 × 105 cells/cm2 in standard culture medium with 10% pooled human AB serum. |
Ding, D.-C. et al., 2013 [57] | ASC isolated from abdominal subcutaneous fat of women undergoing gynaecological surgery. | Adipose Tissue Abdominal subcutaneous fat | 27 | Group I: (30–39 y) Group II: (40–49 y) Group III: (50–60 y) | ASCs dissociated with collagenase, passaged at 80% confluence, 1:3 ratio. |
Choudhery, M. S. et al., 2014 [65] | Assessed effects of age on ASC expansion and differentiation. Measured expression of p16 and p21, population doublings (PD), superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity, cellular senescence, and differentiation potential. | Adipose Tissue | 29 | Group I: (<30) Group II: (35–55 y) Group III: (>60) | ASCs isolated via enzymatic digestion and then plated. |
Ruzzini, L et al., 2014 [66] | Tendon stem cells (TSCs) were isolated through magnetic sorting from the hamstring tendons of six patients. TSC percentage, morphology and clonogenic potential were evaluated, as well as the expression of specific surface markers. | Hamstring tendons | 6 | Group I: (20–22) Group II: (28–31) Group III: (49–50) | Tendon biopsies yielded MSCs from fat and muscle via digestion and centrifugation, then cultured. |
Lee, D.-H. et al., 2015 [67] | This study assessed the phenotypic and functional differences in ACL-MSCs isolated from younger and older donors and evaluated the correlation between ACL-MSC proportion and donor age. | ACL remnants from ACL reconstruction or TKA | 69 | Group I: Young—ACL reconstruction—29.67 ± 10.92 years Group II: Old—TKA—67.96 ± 5.22 years | Isolated ACL fascicles, washed, minced, digested, and plated after centrifugation and filtration. |
Marędziak, M. et al., 2016 [68] | The study evaluated fibroblast colony forming unit (CFUF) count, proliferation rate, population doubling time (PDT), and lineage-specific differentiation parameters (osteogenic, adipogenic, chondrogenic). | Subcutaneous adipose tissue. | 32 | 22 to 77 years old Group I: >20 years (mean age 24 ± 1.4 years; n = 8), Group II: >50 years (mean age 57.5 ± 0.7 years; n = 8), Group III: >60 years (mean age 67 ± 1.4 years; n = 8), and Group IV: >70 years (mean age 75 ± 2.8 years; n = 8). | Tissue samples digested in collagenase, centrifuged, and cells resuspended in culture medium for culturing. |
Kawagishi-Hotta, M et al., 2017 [69] | ASCs were assessed for proliferation, as well as adipogenic, osteogenic, and chondrogenic differentiation potentials in vitro. Individual donor characteristics were analyzed via principal component analysis (PCA) based on these parameters. | Adipose tissue | 260 | 5–97 years old | Subcutaneous adipose tissue digested to obtain SVF cells and ASCs, cultured in FGF-supplemented medium. |
Prall, W. C. et al., 2018 [59] | This study found similar properties in hMSCs from iliac crest and proximal tibia, including proliferation and differentiation capabilities. | BM
| 46 | Group I: young (18–49 years) Group II: Aged (≥50 years) | MSCs were isolated by washing the bone graft material and digesting it. |
Andrzejewska, A. et al., 2019 [58] | Compared adult and elder BM-MSCs from a biobank, evaluating growth kinetics, gene expression, and differentiation potential. | Metaphyseal Bone Marrow
| 23 | Mean age of adults = 38 years, Mean age of elderly = 72 years | Isolatedvia centrifugation and density grdients, cultured under standard conditions in an expansion medium. |
3.3. Characterization of MSCs
3.4. Other Outcomes
3.5. Chondrogenic Differentiation of MSCs
3.6. Adipogenic and Osteogenic Differentiation of MSCs
3.7. Quality of Studies
4. Discussion
4.1. Risk Factors of Osteoarthritis
4.2. Chronological Age and MSCs Behavior In Vitro and In Vivo
4.3. Effects—MSCs Characterization
4.4. Effects—Chondrogenic Potential
4.5. Adipogenic and Osteogenic Potential
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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References | Proliferation Analysis | Proliferation Results | MSC Characterization | Other Outcomes |
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Scharstuhl et al., 2007 [56] | MSC count was estimated by counting adherent cell clones in a 10-cm2 dish 4 days after seeding 2 × 106 mononuclear cells. Confluence was reached in 9–11 days, followed by 5 passages, resulting in approximately 25 population doublings per initial MSC. | Age showed no correlation with BM mononuclear cell count, MSC yield, or cell size. Proliferative capacity and cellular spectrum remained independent of age. | Primary MSCs from different groups consistently expressed CD10, CD73, CD90, CD105, CD109, CD140b, CD164, CD166 as confirmed by flow cytometry. No correlation was observed between MSC phenotype and donor age. | N/A |
Stolzing et al., 2008 [60] | Age-related reductions were observed in CFU-fibroblast (CFU-f) numbers and in the counts of CD45^low/D7fib^+ve/LNGF^+ve cells. Additionally, there was diminished capacity for proliferation and differentiation. | Significant decline in CFU-f numbers was observed in the older age group. In terms of proliferation potential, all cultures showed similar initial growth, but after about 5 weeks, age-related differences emerged. Proliferation in the “aged” MSC cultures began to decline, reaching a plateau, while cultures from “adult” donors continued to proliferate. | Passages 1–5 MSC were stained for various markers. They consistently expressed CD13, CD44, CD90, CD105, Stro-1, and D7-Fib regardless of age. Significant age-related changes were observed in the expression levels of CD44 (increase) and CD90, CD105, and Stro-1 (decrease). | Indices of cellular ageing including oxidative damage, ROS levels, and p21 and p53 all increased suggesting a progressive loss of MSC numbers and differentiation capacity with age. NO increased progressively with age, and SOD activity declined significantly with age. Levels of oxidised proteins (carbonyls), AGEs and lipofuscin content (biomarkers of ageing) significantly increased with age. Age-related decrease in mean HSP levels with age. |
Alm, J. J. et al., 2010 [61] | Population doublings (PDs) were calculated at each passage. Colony formation efficiency was assessed by plating cells at 100 cells/well in a 6-well plate and counting colonies after 21 days. Cell proliferation was monitored by calculating PD and PD rate at each passage (P). | Total PDs and PD rate were significantly higher for younger fracture patients (group III) compared to those of elderly patients (groups I and II). Higher number of colonies formed by MSCs from younger patients using CFU assay. Linear regression confirmed an age-dependent decline in total PDs. | Cells from groups I and III displayed positive expression for CD73, CD105, and CD90, while being negative for CD45 and CD14. In a limited flow cytometric analysis, cells from three younger fracture patients (group III) showed 98% positivity for CD73, CD105, and CD90, with less than 1% positive for CD45, CD14, CD19, and HLA-DR. | N/A |
Fickert et al., 2011 [62] | After the expanded cells reached ~80% confluence in P0, adherent cells from split in P1 into four similar plates. MSCs were seeded at low density (2 × 105) in a new culture flask for future expansion. From P1–8, every expansion flask was split to four similar plates. Stop of proliferation was defined by more than the double mean time period of former cultivation time and morphological changes such as polygranulation and polynucleation. | MSC proliferation time varied by patient group. Cells from young and elderly groups (I and III) grew faster (5 and 7 months) than those from the middle-aged group (II; 11 months), although cells in groups II and III showed a wide range of individual doubling times. | Regardless of age, over 60% of MSCs expressed CD166, CD105, CD90, CD54, and CD73 after P1. CD166 was present in 90–100% of cells regardless of differentiation stage or age group. No significant differences were observed in CD marker expression between expanded and differentiated MSCs. | N/A |
Alt, E. U. et al., 2012 [63] | For doubling time experiments, 20,000 ASCs from each group were plated in a 75 cm2 flask and counted at 48, 72, and 96 h. The population doubling time was calculated from at least three time points, and the mean was determined. | A weaker CFU ability and increased population doubling time were observed in groups 2 and 3 compared to group 1. | Flow cytometry analysis showed consistent expression of CD44, CD90, CD105, and CD146, and absence of CD3, CD4, CD11b, CD34, and CD45 surface markers in ASCs from all three groups. | N/A |
Siegel et al., 2013 [64] | Colony formation capacity was assessed by seeding sub-confluent primary BM-MSCs (P0) at densities of 100, 200, and 500 cells per well in six-well plates at P1. After 10 days of culture, cells were fixed and stained. The percentage of colony formation was calculated for each seeding density and MSC preparation. | At P1, a density of 1000 cells per cm2 was used. Subpopulations of more rapidly dividing cells expressed surface markers at a higher density. While no correlation was found between donor age and MSC proliferation capacity (n = 52), high clonogenic BM-MSCs, which were smaller, divided more rapidly, and were more frequent, were observed in preparations from younger female donors. | BM-MSCs from younger donors exhibited elevated expression of MCAM, VCAM-1, ALCAM, PDG-FRβ, PDL-1, Thy1, and CD71. Conversely, CD71, CD90, CD106, CD140b, CD146, CD166, and CD274 showed a negative correlation with donor age. | The clonogenic potential of BM-MSCs did not align with lineage-specific mRNA expression. Clonogenic potential correlated positively with Prdm14 mRNA expression but not with Oct4 or Nanog mRNA. The levels of Oct4, Nanog, and Prdm14 mRNA in BM-MSCs were notably lower compared to pluripotent stem cells and were independent of donor age. |
Ding, D.-C. et al., 2013 [57] | ASCs at P2–3 were used for proliferation assay. Cells were harvested and counted on days 0, 2, 3 and 4, and a growth curve generated. To calculate the PD time, 1 × 104 cells were seeded in a Petri dish. | Proliferation capacity was not reduced in the older population groups. The average PD time for all ASC donors was 21.5 ± 2.3 h. | Surface expressions of CD13, CD44, CD90 and HLA-ABC consistent with BMSC. CD34 was expressed in 11.9 ± 8.8%, 9.8 ± 7.7% and 16 ± 4% of ASC derived from 30–39 y, 40–49 y and 50–60 y age groups, respectively. | ASCs exhibited a similar immunophenotype to BM-MSCs. Chronological age was linked to increased pre-adipogenic commitment and reduced adipogenic differentiation potential, while other characteristics remained consistent. |
Choudhery, M. S. et al., 2014 [65] | Cumulative growth index. Serial passaging at 1:10 dilution, measuring cells before and after each passage. The population doublings (PDs) and doubling time (DT) were calculated. | Higher population doublings in older age groups: PD = 44.1 ± 7.1 vs. 38.5 ± 4.3 vs. 34.3 ± 8.1 doublings for young, adult, and aged donors, respectively. Additionally, longer doubling time observed at older ages: 62.0 ± 5.9, 80.9 ± 29.6, and 89.1 ± 26.6 h for young, adult, and aged donors, respectively. | Flow cytometry; MSCs were strongly positive for MSC markers (CD44, CD73, CD90, CD105) while lacking expression of hematopoietic markers (CD3, CD14, CD19, CD34, CD45). | Aged ASCs showed reduced viability, proliferation, and increased senescence. Additionally, their differentiation potential was reduced. Tissue samples from older donors also yielded fewer viable mononuclear cells. |
Ruzzini, L et al., 2014 [66] | Colony Forming Assay: TSCs were seeded at 2 cells/cm2 and cultured for 15 days. Colonies >2 mm in diameter were counted and sized after staining with 1% crystal violet. | The size of the colonies formed by group 3 (older) was significantly larger than the colonies formed by the other groups. | Tendon-derived CD44+ cells expressed stem cell markers CD146 and STRO1. They were negative for CD34, confirming absence of hematopoietic cell contamination. These cells also exhibited tenogenic markers a-SMA and TNMD. | Effects of age on proliferation but not differentiation potential. |
Lee, D.-H. et al., 2015 [67] | 1 × 105 primary ACL-derived MSCs were cultured for 14 days, detached, and counted. Subsequently, 1 × 105 P1 cells were seeded into a 100-mm diameter culture dish and harvested after 7 days to obtain P2 cells. | At passage 0, the mean proportion of MSCs was significantly higher in ACL cells from the TKA than from the ACL reconstruction group (19.69 ± 8.57% vs. 15.33 ± 7.49%). However, MSC proportions at P1 and P2 were similar in the two groups. | MSCs were defined as cells triple positive for CD44, CD90 and CD105 and negative for CD34. Acquired cells were gated as P1 and surface expression of CD44, CD90, and CD105 was assessed in CD34–population. | Gene profiles of P2 MSCs from both groups were analyzed using microarray analysis, revealing 40 genes with 2- to 18-fold differential regulation. In the older group, the top three genes with higher expression were C7orf28B, XIST, and PRG4. Conversely, the top three genes with reduced expression in the older group were RPS4Y1, PSG5, and EIF1AY. |
Marędziak, M. et al., 2016 [68] | The proliferation of hASC was assessed using a commercial kit on the 2nd, 5th, and 7th days. Proliferation factor and population doubling time (PDT) were calculated from absorbance measurements. | Group 1 cells exhibited higher proliferation rates, reaching full confluence by day 5. Older donor samples (groups 2, 3, and 4) showed similar growth curves. PDT correlated with age, with younger donors achieving it faster. CFU formation ranged from 0.9% (>70) to 5.7% (>20) and was age dependent. | Flow cytometry analyzed MSC surface markers (CD44, CD73, CD90, CD105, CD34, CD45). While overall expression percentages remained consistent, CD73 showed slight age-related variation, with higher expression in the youngest group compared to others. | Aged hASCs had increased senescent features. |
Kawagishi-Hotta, M et al., 2017 [69] | Cultured up to passage 5, PDL and doubling time were assessed by viable cell counts using a hemocytometer. Seeding density maintained at 1–2 × 104/cm2, with media renewal every 2–3 days. | The doubling time of p4 ASCs increased with age, but no significant correlation was observed between proliferation potential and donor age (r = 0.099). | Elderly group cells showed higher CD73 expression compared to the young group. In the young group, highly proliferative cells had lower CD105 expression than low-potential cells. | N/A |
Prall, W. C. et al., 2018 [59] | Passage 1 cumulative PD and PDT were evaluated over 8 weeks. Clonogenic efficiency was determined using the CFU assay. | Cumulative PD for iliac crest: Young—17.6 ± 1.9, Old—14.8 ± 5.2. Cumulative PD for proximal tibia: Young—17.0 ± 2.8, Old—17.4 ± 3.1. No significant PDT differences between sites or age groups. Proliferation peaks between day seven and ten, then decreases by day 14. | The cells derived from all donor sites showed a positive expression of CD73, CD90 and CD105. | N/A |
Andrzejewska, A. et al., 2019 [58] | BMSC growth kinetics were quantified by calculating population doublings at each passage. | BMSCs showed consistent growth kinetics at passages 3 to 6, irrespective of donor age or diabetic status. Increased cell diameter and volume were observed only in the elderly at P6. | No age-based differences were observed. The isolated cells expressed typical MSC markers (CD73, CD90, CD105, and CD146) while being negative for contaminating cell populations (CD14, CD19, CD31, CD34, and CD45) | No significant difference found. |
References | Protocol | Gene Expression | Histological Staining | Other Biochemical Assays | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scharstuhl et al., 2007 [56] | A droplet containing 4 × 105 primary cells in CM supplemented with TGF-β3 cultured for 21 days. | - ACAN (aggrecan) - COL1 and COL2 (collagen) No correlation between mRNA profiles and donor age could be detected. | Safranin-O/Fast Green staining, type II and type I collagen immunohistochemistry. Hypertrophy determined by staining did not correlate with age. | N/A | MSCs differentiated into the chondrogenic lineage Irrespective of age. |
Stolzing et al., 2008 [60] | 2.5 × 105 cells cultured in CM for 21 days. | N/A | Sulfated GAG was visualized on Toluidine Blue and Alcian Blue binding assay. | N/A | Chondrogenic differentiation declined in “aged” MSC compared to “adult” MSC although this did not reach significance. |
Alm, J. J. et al., 2010 [61] | MSCs (2 × 105) were pelleted and cultured in CM | N/A | After 3 weeks, Toluidine Blue staining showed a proteoglycan-rich extracellular matrix and the presence of chondrocyte-like lacunae in all groups. | N/A | N/A |
Fickert et al., 2011 [62] | Expanded MSCs (1 × 106) were cultured in pellet form with TGF-β3 for 3 weeks for subsequent gene expression, histological, and immunohistological analyses. | RT-PCR gene expression analysis using COL2 and COMP | Similar Alcian Blue staining in a 55-year-old patient and a 73-year-old patient. | N/A | N/A |
Alt, E. U. et al., 2012 [63] | Chondrogenic differentiation with about 1 × 105 cells spun in a 15 mL conical tube and grown in CM for 21 days. | Down-regulation of BMP6, COL2A, and Col10A genes observed in cells from group III compared to group I. | Micro masses were fixed and stained with Toluidine Blue | N/A | Chondrogenic potential decreased with age. |
Siegel et al., 2013 [64] | Differentiation induced with hMSC Chondrogenic Differentiation BulletKit (PT-3003, Lonza) + TGF-β3. | No significant differences detected in lineage-specific mRNA expression for chondrogenesis (SOX9, n = 47 and COLL2, n = 32). | Frozen sections of fixed pellets were stained with Safranin O for chondrogenesis (n = 40) | N/A | No donor age related differences detected. |
Ding, D.-C. et al., 2013 [57] | ASC at P3 isolated and grown in chndrogenic media containing TGF-β1 at density 1 × 105. After 3w, fixed in slides and stained using standard Alcian Blue protocols. | qRT-PCR for gene expression at Day 0 and Day 21 of ACAN and COL2 | Alcian Blue | Size of pellet/micromass | No effect of chronological age on chondrogenic potential. |
Choudhery, M. S. et al., 2014 [65] | Chondrogenesis was induced in micromass pellets derived from 2.5 × 105 MSCs, cultured in chondrogenic medium for 3 weeks. | qRT-PCR of: -ACAN (aggrecan) -COL2 (collage type-2) | Alcian Blue | N/A | ASC chondrogenic potential declines with donor age. Stronger Alician Blue staining and higher levels of expression of lineage-specific markers. |
Ruzzini, L et al., 2014 [66] | Seeded at 1 × 105 density. CM containing TGF-b2 for 3 weeks | SOX-9 was expressed significantly more in group III compared to the other two groups and was expressed significantly more in group I compared to group II. | Alcian Blue staining showed strong positivity for acid mucopolysaccharides and epithelial mucins/cartilage. | N/A | N/A |
Lee, D.-H. et al., 2015 [67] | Group III (49–50 years) showed significantly higher SOX-9 expression compared to groups I (20–22 years) and II (28–31 years). | N/A | Toluidine Blue: there were no significant differences in absorbance at 595 nm between the 2 groups (0.32 ± 0.13 versus 0.45 ± 0.11, p = 0.258). | Comparison of chondrogenic pellet sizes showed that there were also no significant differences between the 2 groups (1.60 ± 0.65 mm versus 2.10 ± 0.37 mm, p = 0.121). | N/A |
Marędziak, M. et al., 2016 [68] | Chondrogenic Differentiation in 24-well plates and inoculated at concentration of 30 × 103 cells per well. The media was changed every two days for 21 days. | Col II expression was higher in the youngest group compared to the older groups, while Aggrecan expression was higher in the youngest group compared to the oldest. | Safranin O | Collagen II levels were higher in the youngest group compared to all other groups, measured by ELISA. | The ability of hASCs to differentiate into chondroblasts decreases with age. |
Kawagishi-Hotta, M et al., 2017 [69] | Passage 5 cells (1 × 105) were centrifuged and suspended in CM with BMP-2 and TGF-b1. | N/A | Normalized GAG did not show a correlation with age (r = 0.059), but a large variation was noted. | CFU-F assay. Chondrogenesis was assayed by the sulfated GAG content and normalized with DNA content. | Chondrogenic potential of cells was not correlated with donor age, but individual differences were observed in all age groups. |
Prall, W. C. et al., 2018 [59] | Cells were preconditioned in hypoxia for four days during monolayer expansion. Pellets containing 4.5 × 105 cells were stimulated for 28 days in conditioned medium supplemented with TGFβ1 and BMP2. | N/A | Safranin O staining: Age-pooled chondrogenic differentiation showed 82.8% ± 27.0 for iliac crest-derived cells and 88.3% ± 22.9 for proximal tibia-derived cells. | N/A | No significant different differences were observed between both age groups. |
Andrzejewska, A. et al., 2019 [58] | Passage 6 cells were cultured in V-bottom 96-well plates with TGF-β3 enriched culture medium for up to 21 days. | N/A | Alcian Blue staining of pellet sections showed similar proteoglycan production in BMSCs from adult and elderly donors upon chondrogenic differentiation (p < 0.01 and p < 0.001). | N/A | N/A |
Reference | Protocol | Results | Protocol | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|
Scharstuhl et al., 2007 [56] | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Stolzing et al., 2008 [60] | Cells were incubated in OM for 10 days. ALP quantification was performed using a colourimetric assay. Changes in VDR, GR, and the Notch-1 receptor. | ALP activity declined with age, with “aged” MSCs displaying significantly lower activity compared to “adult” MSCs. Notch-1 and VDR levels also showed a significant decrease with age, while GR levels increased significantly in “aged” MSCs compared to ‘‘adult’’ MSCs. | Adipogenic differentiation was assessed by quantifying the percentage of Oil Red O-positive cells after culturing in adipogenic medium (AM). | Age did not lead to significant changes in the percentage of Oil Red O-positive cells. |
Alm, J. J. et al., 2010 [61] | ALP and von Kossa staining at 2 and 4 weeks, respectively, along with calcium content measurement, were conducted to assess osteogenic differentiation. | Elderly-patient-derived cells exhibited reduced osteogenic potential compared to younger patient-derived cells. This was evident in lower ALP expression and mineralization. The decline in ALP expression and von Kossa staining was age-dependent. | Cells were cultured in AM for 3 weeks and evaluated for accumulation of intracellular lipid droplets. | Both BM-MSCs and PB-MSCs displayed increased lipid droplets after 21 days of differentiation, indicating adipogenic differentiation post-passage. However, quantitative analysis was not conducted. |
Fickert et al., 2011 [62] | Cells were cultured in osteogenic medium for 11 days, and osteogenic differentiation was assessed through ALP activity and gene expression analysis of osteogenic markers (Coll I and II, Cbfa1, ALP, OC, and BSP1). | With increasing donor age, there is no observed reduction in ALP activity. In passage 1, ALP activity was approximately 465 mU/mg in group I, 283 mU/mg in group II, and 344 mU/mg in group III. By passage 2, ALP activity decreased in the youngest donor group and increased in the older groups. Overall, the highest ALP activity was detected in the age group over 65 years. The detectable frequency of genes differed; however, it was independent of donor age. Osteogenic markers in all groups increased over several passages, with group III exhibiting the highest expression level in passage 1. | N/A | N/A |
Alt, E. U. et al., 2012 [63] | Differentiated cells were stained with Alizarin Red or quantified for ALP. | Osteogenic differentiation potential declined significantly with age. ALP concentration in group 3 was markedly reduced when compared to group I (from ~50% in group I to ~22% in group III). | Adipogenic differentiation evaluated by Oil Red O staining and real-time PCR analyses of lineage-specific genes. | The percentage of cells undergoing adipogenic differentiation decreased from approximately 33% in group I to about 10% in group III. Real-time PCR analysis of LPL and CEBPA on lineage-specific transcriptomes showed a down-regulation in group III compared to group I. |
Siegel et al., 2013 [64] | OM with dexamethasone, ascorbic acid and β-glycerolphosphate. Osteogenesis assessed by Alizarin Red staining (n = 40) and lineage-specific mRNA expression of OPN (n = 17) and AP (n = 41). | No donor age-related differences detected in the osteogenic differentiation for Alizarin Red staining (n = 40). No statistically significant differences for the lineage-specific mRNA expression of OPN and AP. | Commercial adipogenic kit. Adipogenesis assessed by lineage-specific staining with Oil Red O staining (n = 40) and lineage-specific mRNA expression of LPL (n = 44) and PPARγ (n = 48). | No donor age-related differences were detected in the adipogenic differentiation capacity, analyzed by Oil Red O staining. Similarly, no statistically significant differences were observed in the lineage-specific mRNA expression of LPL and PPARγ. |
Ding, D.-C. et al., 2013 [57] | ASC harvested at P3, cultured in OM for 21 days and stained with Alizarin Red. Gene expression assessed for osteopontin. | Osteogenic potential using gene expression for osteopontin, and Alizarin Red staining was not related to donor’s age. | P3 cells differentiated using AM. Adipogenesis and lipid vacuole formation in the ASC were studied by staining cells with Oil Red. Gene expression of PPAR-γ also assessed. | Older age (II, III) groups exhibited reduced adipogenic potential, with lower intracellular lipid content and decreased expression of the PPAR-γ gene compared to the I group. |
Choudhery, M. S. et al., 2014 [65] | Osteogenic differentiation was induced using OM for 3 weeks. Assessment was conducted via Von Kossa staining and gene expression analysis of ALP and osteocalcin. | Osteogenic potential decreases with age. Young donors showed significantly higher expression of ALP and osteocalcin compared to adult and aged donors. | Adipogenic induction medium, for 3 weeks and assessed by Oil Red O staining. | Chronological age had no effect. |
Ruzzini, L et al., 2014 [66] | OM for 3 weeks. Then fixed and stained with Von Kossa stain. Gene expression using RUNX-2 | RUNX-2 expression was significantly higher in group I compared to the other two groups. Von Kossa staining showed clustered areas of calcium deposition. | Cells were cultured in adipogenic induction medium for 3 weeks, followed by fixation and Oil Red O staining. Additionally, PPARG mRNA expression was assessed. | PPARG mRNA expression was significantly higher in group I compared to the other two groups. Additionally, lipid droplets were observed in cells on Oil Red O staining. |
Lee, D.-H. et al., 2015 [67] | Passage 1 or 2 cells were plated in a 24-well plate. Invitrogen OM used once cells were 50–70% confluent for 2 weeks with medium changes twice per week. Osteogenic analysis using Alizarin Red staining. | No significant differences in staining between groups (p = 0.547). | Passage 1 or 2 cells were cultured in MSCGM until 100% confluence, then switched to STEM-PRO AM for 2 weeks with bi-weekly medium changes. Adipogenic differentiation was assessed using Oil Red O staining. | No significant differences in absorbance at 490 nm between groups (p = 0.875). |
Marędziak, M. et al., 2016 [68] | Osteogenic Differentiation Kit used in 24-well plates for 21 days with OM changed every two days. Osteogenic differentiation assessed using Alizarin Red staining, and BMP-2, ACAN, and Col-I ELISA, and Col-II, ADIQ, and LEP assays. Expression of osteoblast-specific markers (OPN, Col-I, OCL, and BMP-2) were analyzed by qRTPCR. | Osteogenic differentiation potential decreases with donor age. Gene expression of OPN, OCL and BMP-2 revealed higher expression in younger patients. For Col-I, a similar trend was observed across all donor groups. | Adipogenic differentiation was induced using the Adipogenic Differentiation Kit in 24-well plates with Adipogenic Medium (AM) for 14 days. Differentiation was evaluated through Oil Red O staining, and the concentration of adiponectin (ADIQ) and leptin (LEP) in the medium. Expression of adipocyte-specific markers (LEP, ADIQ, and PPAR-γ) was assessed by qRT-PCR. | No differences between age groups in Oil Red O staining. Leptin, adiponectin, and PPAR-γ concentrations were elevated in older patients as compared to the >20-year-old group. |
Kawagishi-Hotta, M et al., 2017 [69] | Passage 5 cells were seeded in a 24-well plate After 4 days, differentiation with OM for 21 days with medium changed every 2–3 days. Osteogenic differentiation assessed using normalized quantification of Ca deposition and Alizarin Red staining. | Normalized calcium deposition exhibited no correlation with age (r = 0.005). While large variations were observed, individual differences were evident across all age groups. These differences in osteogenic potential increased incrementally with donor age. | Passage 5 cells were seeded in a 24-well plate. After 4 days, differentiation with AM for 4–6 days. Adipogenic analyses using Oil Red O. | Normalized concentration of eluted Oil Red O showed a significant correlation with age(r = −0.283). Individual difference in adipogenic potential was great and observed in all age groups. |
Prall, W. C. et al., 2018 [59] | Passage 3 cells were fully confluent before differentiation. Alizarin Red staining was performed at 7 and 14 days. Gene expression of DLX5, RUNX2, ALPL, and SPP1 was assessed. | No significant differences. Comparable increase in gene expression in all donors. Alizarin Red staining after 14 days showed no difference between the groups. | Cells were seeded in 6-well plates and exposed to BODIPY AM for 5 days followed by 2 days in preservation media. This process was repeated for 21 days. | Adipogenic differentiation showed no significant differences between groups or donor sites. |
Andrzejewska, A. et al., 2019 [58] | Osteogenesis was assessed using Alizarin Red | No difference between adult vs. elderly donors at day 14 or day 22 time points, and passage 3 and 6. A strong reduction in mineralization for higher vs. lower passage cells. Cells from adult and elderly donors exhibited significantly diminished osteogenic differentiation at passage 6 compared with passage 3 (p < 0.01 and p < 0.001). | Adipogenesis was assessed using Nile Red. | No difference between adult vs. elderly at either time point but a stronger passage-dependent reduction for cells from elderly donors compared to adult donors. Adipogenic differentiation potential only showed minor changes, mainly reduced lipid formation, when comparing early and late passages or at later readout (p < 0.05). |
Clinical trial ID | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | |
Randomisation of administered dose or exposure level | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Allocation concealment | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
Appropriate participant selection for comparison | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | - | + | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Accounting for important confounding/modifying variables | + | - | - | - | + | + | ++ | + | + | - | + | + | + | + |
Identical experimental conditions across study groups | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Blinding of research personnel | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Complete outcome data | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | + | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Confidence in exposure characterisation | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Confidence in outcome assessment (incl. assessor blinding) | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | ++ | + | + | + | + | + | + |
Complete reporting of measured outcomes | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ | ++ |
Other potential threats to internal validity (bias) | + | - | - | ++ | - | ++ | + | + | - | - | + | + | + | + |
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Vogt, A.; Kapetanos, K.; Christodoulou, N.; Asimakopoulos, D.; Birch, M.A.; McCaskie, A.W.; Khan, W. The Effects of Chronological Age on the Chondrogenic Potential of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: A Systematic Review. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2023, 24, 15494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015494
Vogt A, Kapetanos K, Christodoulou N, Asimakopoulos D, Birch MA, McCaskie AW, Khan W. The Effects of Chronological Age on the Chondrogenic Potential of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2023; 24(20):15494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015494
Chicago/Turabian StyleVogt, Antonia, Konstantinos Kapetanos, Neophytos Christodoulou, Dimitrios Asimakopoulos, Mark A. Birch, Andrew W. McCaskie, and Wasim Khan. 2023. "The Effects of Chronological Age on the Chondrogenic Potential of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: A Systematic Review" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 24, no. 20: 15494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015494
APA StyleVogt, A., Kapetanos, K., Christodoulou, N., Asimakopoulos, D., Birch, M. A., McCaskie, A. W., & Khan, W. (2023). The Effects of Chronological Age on the Chondrogenic Potential of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 24(20), 15494. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242015494