Equine Colostrum-Derived Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: A Potential Resource for Veterinary Regenerative Medicine
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Beyond its immunological role, colostrum has emerged as a promising, non-invasive source of bioactive factors, including Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (MSCs). This study represents the first attempt to isolate and characterize MSCs from equine colostrum (C-MSCs) and assess their potential use in veterinary regenerative medicine. Colostrum (n=6) was collected immediately after delivery, centrifuged, and recovered cells cultured under standard conditions. C-MSCs displayed plastic adherence and heterogeneous morphology, including spindle-shaped and epithelial-like cells. PDT values varied among samples, and 4/6 showed rapid proliferation (< 2 days). CFU assays confirmed clonogenic potential, though significant inter-sample variability was observed (p< 0.05). Spheroid formation assays revealed differences in cell-cell adhesion: 4/6 samples formed stable spheroids within four days. Migration assay showed significant variability (p< 0.05): 1/6 achieved complete wound closure within 72 hours, whereas 5/6 reached ~30% at 96 hours. Differentiation assays confirmed trilineage potential, with all samples staining positive for adipogenic, chondrogenic, and osteogenic differentiation. RT-PCR confirmed MSC marker expression, while hematopoietic markers were absent. MHC-I expression was weak in 5/6 samples, whereas MHC-II was consistently negative. These findings support equine colostrum as a viable MSC source, though variability requires further validation with larger samples. Additional research is needed to investigate C-MSCs' immunomodulatory properties and therapeutic potential.