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Hematopoietic capacity of adult human skeletal...
Journal article

Hematopoietic capacity of adult human skeletal muscle is negligible

Abstract

Summary:Using experimental mouse models, hematopoietic potential has been shown to exist within skeletal muscle. In humans, the clinical utility of using muscle-derived hematopoietic progenitors remains uncertain. Here, we evaluate the hematopoietic potential of human skeletal muscle. De novo adult muscle contained markedly reduced levels of hematopoietic colony-forming units (hCFU) and negligible responsiveness to hematopoietic ex vivo culture conditions that augment hematopoietic activity of fetal muscle. Neither fetal nor adult muscle yielded significant engraftment in transplanted immune-deficient mice. Although adult muscle possessed 1.5±0.9 hCFU/g, similar hematopoietic activity (2.3±0.17 hCFU) could also be demonstrated from as little as 3–10 μl of contaminating peripheral blood. We suggest that the clinical utility of adult skeletal muscle as an alternative source of hematopoietic cells in humans appears limited due to the low yield of blood-forming precursors and their lack of responsiveness to ex vivo expansion.

Authors

Allan DS; Jay KE; Bhatia M

Journal

Bone Marrow Transplantation, Vol. 35, No. 7, pp. 663–666

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

April 1, 2005

DOI

10.1038/sj.bmt.1704866

ISSN

0268-3369

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