Hypoxia Differentially Modulates the Genomic Stability of Clinical-Grade ADSCs and BM-MSCs in Long-Term Culture

Author:

Bigot Nicolas123,Mouche Audrey123,Preti Milena456,Loisel Séverine123,Renoud Marie-Laure456,Le Guével Rémy27,Sensebé Luc456,Tarte Karin1238,Pedeux Rémy123

Affiliation:

1. INSERM U917, Microenvironnement et Cancer, Rennes, France

2. Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France

3. Etablissement Français du Sang Bretagne, Rennes, France

4. Etablissement Français du Sang Pyrénées Méditerranée, Toulouse, France

5. Université Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France

6. UMR5273-INSERM U1031, Toulouse, France

7. ImPACcell, SFR Biosit, Université de Rennes 1, Rennes, France

8. Service ITeCH, CHU Pontchaillou, Rennes, France

Abstract

Abstract Long-term cultures under hypoxic conditions have been demonstrated to maintain the phenotype of mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) and to prevent the emergence of senescence. According to several studies, hypoxia has frequently been reported to drive genomic instability in cancer cells and in MSCs by hindering the DNA damage response and DNA repair. Thus, we evaluated the occurrence of DNA damage and repair events during the ex vivo expansion of clinical-grade adipose-derived stromal cells (ADSCs) and bone marrow (BM)-derived MSCs cultured with platelet lysate under 21% (normoxia) or 1% (hypoxia) O2 conditions. Hypoxia did not impair cell survival after DNA damage, regardless of MSC origin. However, ADSCs, unlike BM-MSCs, displayed altered γH2AX signaling and increased ubiquitylated γH2AX levels under hypoxic conditions, indicating an impaired resolution of DNA damage-induced foci. Moreover, hypoxia specifically promoted BM-MSC DNA integrity, with increased Ku80, TP53BP1, BRCA1, and RAD51 expression levels and more efficient nonhomologous end joining and homologous recombination repair. We further observed that hypoxia favored mtDNA stability and maintenance of differentiation potential after genotoxic stress. We conclude that long-term cultures under 1% O2 were more suitable for BM-MSCs as suggested by improved genomic stability compared with ADSCs. Stem Cells  2015;33:3608–3620

Funder

ANR program (SAFE 2012)

Université Rennes 1 (Emerging Scientific Challenges 2013)

ECELLFRANCE

European Center for Transplantation Sciences and Immunotherapy

AIS Rennes Métropole

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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