| 22 Mai 2013
Durham, NC – A new study appearing in the current issue of STEM CELLS Translational Medicine indicates that stem cells harvested from fat (adipose) are more potent  than those collected from bone marrow in helping to modulate the body’s  immune system.
 
 The finding could have significant implications in developing new  stem-cell-based therapies, as adipose tissue-derived stem cells (AT-SCs)  are far more plentiful in the body than those found in bone marrow and  can be collected from waste material from liposuction procedures. Stem  cells are considered potential therapies for a range of conditions, from  enhancing skin graft survival to treating inflammatory bowel disease.
 
 Researchers at the Leiden University Medical Center’s Department of  Immunohematology and Blood Transfusion in Leiden, The Netherlands, led  by Helene Roelofs, Ph.D., conducted the study. They were seeking an  alternative to bone marrow for stem cell therapies because of the low  number of stem cells available in marrow and also because harvesting  them involves an invasive procedure.
 
 “Adipose tissue is an interesting alternative since it contains  approximately a 500-fold higher frequency of stem cells and tissue  collection is simple,” Dr. Roelofs said.
 
 “Moreover,” Dr. Melief added, “400,000 liposuctions a year are  performed in the U.S. alone, where the aspirated adipose tissue is  regarded as waste and could be collected without any additional burden  or risk for the donor.”
 
 For the study, the team used stem cells collected from the bone marrow  and fat tissue of age-matched donors. They compared the cells’ ability  to regulate the immune system in vitro and found that the two performed  similarly, although it took a smaller dose for the AT-SCs to achieve the  same effect on the immune cells.
 
 When it came to secreting cytokines — the cell signaling molecules that  regulate the immune system — the AT-SCs also outperformed the bone  marrow-derived cells.
 
 “This all adds up to make AT-SC a good alternative to bone marrow stem  cells for developing new therapies,” Dr. Roelofs concluded.
 
 “Cells from bone marrow and from fat were equivalent in terms of their  potential to differentiate into multiple cell types,” said Anthony  Atala, M.D., editor of STEM CELLS Translational Medicine and director of  Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine. “The fact that the  cells from fat tissue seem to be more potent at suppressing the immune  system suggest their promise in clinical therapies.”