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      Xenogenic neural stem cell-derived extracellular nanovesicles modulate human mesenchymal stem cell fate and reconstruct metabolomic structure

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      Author(s)
      Derkus, B.
      Isik, M.
      Eylem, C. C.
      Ergin, İ.
      Camci, C. B.
      Bilgin, S.
      Elbüken, Çaglar
      Arslan, Y. E.
      Akkulak, M.
      Adali, O.
      Kiran, F.
      Okesola, B. O.
      Nemutlu, E.
      Emregul, E.
      Date
      2022-03-28
      Source Title
      Advanced Biology
      Electronic ISSN
      2701-0198
      Publisher
      Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA
      Volume
      6
      Issue
      6
      Pages
      2101317- 1 - 2101317- 15
      Language
      English
      Type
      Article
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      Abstract
      Extracellular nanovesicles, particularly exosomes, can deliver their diverse bioactive biomolecular content, including miRNAs, proteins, and lipids, thus providing a context for investigating the capability of exosomes to induce stem cells toward lineage-specific cells and tissue regeneration. In this study, it is demonstrated that rat subventricular zone neural stem cell-derived exosomes (rSVZ-NSCExo) can control neural-lineage specification of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). Microarray analysis shows that the miRNA content of rSVZ-NSCExo is a faithful representation of rSVZ tissue. Through immunocytochemistry, gene expression, and multi-omics analyses, the capability to use rSVZ-NSCExo to induce hMSCs into a neuroglial or neural stem cell phenotype and genotype in a temporal and dose-dependent manner via multiple signaling pathways is demonstrated. The current study presents a new and innovative strategy to modulate hMSCs fate by harnessing the molecular content of exosomes, thus suggesting future opportunities for rSVZ-NSCExo in nerve tissue regeneration.
      Permalink
      http://hdl.handle.net/11693/111794
      Published Version (Please cite this version)
      https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adbi.202101317
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