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Evaluation of committed and primitive cord blood progenitors after expansion on adipose stromal cells.

Umbilical cord blood mononuclear fraction is a valuable source of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (CB HSPCs). The rarity of this population is a serious limitation of its application in cell therapy. Ex vivo expansion enables to significantly amplify the number of hematopoietic precursors of different commitment. Here, we expand CB MNCs in co-culture with human adipose tissue-derived stromal cells (ASCs) to enrich HSPCs and describe phenotypic features of newly formed hematopoietic populations. The CD34+ -HSPCs demonstrated 6-fold enrichment with 9000 CFUs per 50 × 103 HSPCs on average. A part of the floating HSPCs were bearing lineage markers, while others were primitive precursors (CD133- /CD34+ ). Among ASC-associated HSPCs, two subsets of cord blood-borne cells were revealed: СD90+ /СD45- and СD90+ /СD45+ . The proportion of CD3+ /CD8+ and NK-T as well as CD25+ and HLA-DR+ Т cells among СD90+ /СD45- cells was significantly higher compared to MNCs and floating HSPCs. More than 80% of CD45+ /СD90+ HSPCs were identified as late primitive precursors (CD133- /CD34+ ). Thus, CB MNC expansion in the presence of ASCs provides the generation of both lineage committed lymphoid progenitors and CD34+ /CD133- primitive HSPCs. Substantially enriched with primitive precursors, ASC-associated HSPCs could be considered as a perspective tool for a long-term restoration of hematopoiesis in various hematologic disorders.

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