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  • Therapeutic potential of human minor salivary gland epithelial progenitor cells in liver regeneration.

Therapeutic potential of human minor salivary gland epithelial progenitor cells in liver regeneration.

Scientific reports (2017-10-07)
Chen Zhang, Yan Li, Xiang-Yu Zhang, Lei Liu, Hai-Zhou Tong, Ting-Lu Han, Wan-di Li, Xiao-Lei Jin, Ning-Bei Yin, Tao Song, Hai-Dong Li, Juan Zhi, Zhen-Min Zhao, Lin Lu
ABSTRACT

Liver disease is a serious problem affecting millions of people with continually increasing prevalence. Stem cell therapy has become a promising treatment for liver dysfunction. We previously reported on human minor salivary gland mesenchymal stem cells (hMSGMSCs), which are highly self-renewable with multi-potent differentiation capability. In this study, keratinocyte-like cells with self-regeneration and hepatic differentiation potential were isolated and characterized, and named human minor salivary gland epithelial progenitor cells (hMSG-EpiPCs). hMSG-EpiPCs were easily obtained via minor intraoral incision; they expressed epithelial progenitor/stem cell and other tissue stem cell markers such as CD29, CD49f, cytokeratins, ABCG2, PLET-1, salivary epithelial cell markers CD44 and CD166, and the Wnt target related gene LGR5 and LGR6. The cells were induced into functional hepatocytes in vitro which expressed liver-associated markers ALB, CYP3A4, AAT, and CK18. Upon transplantation in vivo, they ameliorated severe acute liver damage in SCID mice caused by carbon tetrachloride (CCl