4.8 Article

Cell-subpopulation alteration and FGF7 activation regulate the function of tendon stem/progenitor cells in 3D microenvironment revealed by single-cell analysis

Journal

BIOMATERIALS
Volume 280, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biomaterials.2021.121238

Keywords

3D microenvironments; Cell subpopulation; FGF7; hTSPCs; Tenogenesis; Tendon regeneration

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFA0104900]
  2. NSFC [T2121004, 81972099, 81772418, 81871764, 82072463]
  3. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LR20H060001]
  4. Fundamental Research Fund for the Central Universities

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3D microenvironments can regulate stem cell function by modulating critical cell subpopulations, enhancing stem cell characteristics and functions.
Three dimensional (3D) microenvironments more accurately replicate native microenvironments for stem cell maintenance and function compared with two dimensional (2D) microenvironments. However, the molecular mechanisms by which 3D microenvironments regulate stem cell function remain largely unexplored at the single-cell level. Here, using a single-cell analysis and functional analysis, we found not all cell-subpopulations respond to 3D microenvironments based on a systematically 3D gelatin microcarrier culture system we developed for the expansion and function maintenance of hTSPCs. 3D microenvironments alter the cell-subpopulation distribution of human tendon stem/progenitor cells (hTSPCs) by improving the proportion of ICAM1+ITGB8+ and FGF7+CYGB+ subpopulations. We also revealed the activated FGF7 signaling in the two subpopulations is responsible for the enhanced tenogenesis of hTSPCs through cell-cell interactions. The hTSPCs cultured in 3D niche with a specific cell-subpopulation structure exhibited superior stem-cell characteristics and functions both in vitro and in vivo. Together, our study demonstrates that 3D microenvironments can regulate stem-cell function by modulating the critical cell subpopulation and identifies FGF7 as a novel regulator for tenogenic differentiation and tendon regeneration.

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