Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/9283432
Title: Mathematical modeling reveals the role of hypoxia in the promotion of human mesenchymal stem cell long-term expansion
Authors: Gao, S 
Xiang, C 
Qin, K
Sun, C
Keywords: Article
cell aging
cell culture
cell cycle
cell division
cell expansion
cell growth
cell hypoxia
cell population
cell proliferation
computer model
human
human cell
mathematical model
mesenchymal stem cell
population dynamics
quantitative analysis
sensitivity analysis
Issue Date: 2018
Citation: Gao, S, Xiang, C, Qin, K, Sun, C (2018). Mathematical modeling reveals the role of hypoxia in the promotion of human mesenchymal stem cell long-term expansion. Stem Cells International 2018 : 9283432. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/9283432
Abstract: Many experimental studies have found that human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in long-term culture exhibited enhanced cell proliferation and prolonged lifespan under hypoxia (around 1%-7% oxygen) against the normoxic condition (about 21% oxygen). Inspired by the experimental findings, we aimed to investigate the hypoxic effects on MSC expansion quantitatively through mathematical modeling to elucidate the corresponding biological mechanism. A two-compartment model based on ordinary differential equations (ODEs), which incorporate cellular division and senescence via state transition, was developed to describe the MSC expansion process. Parameters of this model were fitted to experimental data and used to interpret the different proliferative capacities of MSCs under hypoxia and normoxia along with model sensitivity analysis. The proposed model was tested on data from two separate experimental studies, and it could reproduce the observed growth characteristics in both conditions. Overall, this compartmental model with a logistic state transition rate was sufficient to explain the experimental findings and highlighted the promotive role of hypoxia in MSC proliferation. This in silico study suggests that hypoxia can enhance MSC long-term expansion mainly by delaying replicative senescence, which is indicated by the slowdown of the state transition rate in our model. Therefore, this explanatory model may provide theoretical proof for the experimentally observed MSC growth superiority under hypoxia and has the potential to further optimize MSC culture protocols for regenerative medicine applications. © 2018 Shuhua Gao et al.
Source Title: Stem Cells International
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/173746
ISSN: 16879678
DOI: 10.1155/2018/9283432
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