Chemoattractive potential of stem cells from apical papilla in peripheral blood monocytes: an in vitro study
Alexandre Guimarães dos Santos, Letícia Martins Santos, Juliana Garuba Rahhal, Mariane Sloniak, Cristina Cunha Villar, Fernando Neves Nogueira, Carla Renata Sipert

TL;DR
This study shows that stem cells from apical papilla can attract blood monocytes in a lab setting through a specific signaling molecule called CCL2.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that SCAP-conditioned medium induces monocyte migration via CCL2, a novel finding in stem cell-monocyte interactions.
Findings
SCAP-conditioned medium significantly increased monocyte migration compared to controls.
The effect was blocked by a CCL2 neutralizing antibody, confirming CCL2's role.
SCAP supernatant did not affect monocyte viability, indicating a specific migratory effect.
Abstract
Chemokine (CC-motif) ligand 2 (CCL2) is the primary chemokine involved in monocyte migration from peripheral blood to tissues. These cells, in turn, will differentiate into macrophages and osteoclasts. Given that apical papilla stem cells (SCAP) are an important source of CCL2, this study aimed to investigate whether SCAP culture supernatant can recruit monocytes in vitro via CCL2. SCAP-conditioned medium (CM-SCAP) was obtained through primary culture after confirming the osteo/odontogenic differentiation potential of these cells. The supernatant was analyzed for CCL2 using an immunoenzymatic assay. Monocytes were isolated from human peripheral blood and positively selected using magnetic beads. CD 14+ cells were seeded into 5-μm pore transwell inserts placed in wells containing CM-SCAP. After 24 hours, the insert was removed, and the migrated cells were quantified using the Alamar Blue…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMesenchymal stem cell research · Cancer Cells and Metastasis · Bone Tissue Engineering Materials
