CC
Céline Colnot
  • Faculty, Univ Paris Est Creteil, INSERM, IMRB, France
研究方向
  • Stem cell
Nuclei Isolation From Murine and Human Periosteum For Transcriptomic Analyses
小鼠和人类骨膜核提取用于转录组分析
作者:Simon Perrin, Cassandre Goachet, Maria Ethel, Yasmine Hachemi and Céline Colnot日期:02/20/2025,浏览量:171,Q&A: 0

Bone repair is a complex regenerative process relying on skeletal stem/progenitor cells (SSPCs) recruited predominantly from the periosteum. Activation and differentiation of periosteal SSPCs occur in a heterogeneous environment, raising the need for single cell/nucleus transcriptomics to decipher the response of the periosteum to injury. Enzymatic cell dissociation can induce a stress response affecting the transcriptome and lead to overrepresentation of certain cell types (i.e., immune and endothelial cells) and low coverage of other cell types of interest. To counteract these limitations, we optimized a protocol to isolate nuclei directly from the intact periosteum and from the fracture callus to perform single-nucleus RNA sequencing. This protocol is adapted for fresh murine periosteum, fracture callus, and frozen human periosteum. Nuclei are isolated using mechanical extraction combined with fluorescence-based nuclei sorting to obtain high-quality nucleus suspensions. This protocol allows the capture of the full diversity of cell types in the periosteum and fracture environment to better reflect the in vivo tissue composition.

Mouse Periosteal Cell Culture, in vitro Differentiation, and in vivo Transplantation in Tibial Fractures
小鼠骨膜细胞培养、体外分化及胫骨骨折的体内移植
作者:Simon Perrin, Anais Julien, Oriane Duchamp de Lageneste, Rana Abou-Khalil and Céline Colnot日期:08/05/2021,浏览量:3182,Q&A: 0

The periosteum covering the outer surface of bone contains skeletal stem/progenitor cells that can efficiently form cartilage and bone during bone repair. Several methods have been described to isolate periosteal cells based on bone scraping and/or enzymatic digestion. Here, we describe an explant culture method to isolate periosteum-derived stem/progenitor cells for subsequent in vitro and in vivo analyses. Periosteal cells (PCs) isolated using this protocol express mesenchymal markers, can be expanded in vitro, and exhibit high regenerative potential after in vivo transplantation at a fracture site, suggesting that this protocol can be employed for PC production to use in new cell-based therapies.