inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Department of Biotechnology
Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Exploring BMP9 and integrin alpha 10 as novel chondrogenic markers in human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells, chondroprogenitors, and chondrocytes: an immunohistochemistry study.

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date of Publication

December 1, 2025

Journal

The Knee

Volume/Issue

57

ISSN

1873-5800

BACKGROUND: Evaluating cartilage repair potential involves subjecting the cellular 3D pellets to chondrogenic differentiation and assessing their differentiation degree using immunohistochemical (IHC) studies. Collagen type II IHC staining stands as a key marker to evaluate mature chondrogenesis, but its non-uniform staining confounded by incomplete differentiation necessitates exploring alternative markers. This study explored the potential of BMP9 and Integrin Alpha 10 as novel early-stage chondrogenic markers in human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs), fibronectin assay derived chondroprogenitors (FAA-CPs), migratory chondroprogenitors (MCPs) and chondrocytes following differentiation.

METHODS: Three human articular cartilage samples and bone marrow aspirate from osteoarthritis patients were collected to isolate the BM-MSCs, FAA-CPs, MCPs and chondrocytes. Following their molecular characterization, differentiation assays were conducted followed by their confirmatory staining and IHC for BMP9 and Integrin alpha10.

RESULT: IHC analysis collagen type II revealed positive with a non-uniform pattern of expression. The same sections subjected to integrin alpha 10 IHC analysis exhibited a greater proportion of uptake and a more uniform distribution throughout the differentiated pellet, addressing a key limitation observed with ECM and collagen staining techniques. The spatial homogeneity observed could be attributed to the functional relevance of integrin alpha 10, a Collagen type II receptor which mediates cell-matrix interactions and is specifically expressed in chondrocytes, further underscoring its potential as an alternative marker. However, BMP9 did not display robust staining.

CONCLUSION: Integrin alpha 10 may serve as a valuable alternative or complementary marker to collagen type II for assessing chondrogenic differentiation, offering a more consistent spatial distribution.

Alternate Journal

Knee

PubMed ID

41046808

PubMed Central ID

N/A

Authors

Priya M
Ruksana C A
Jeyaraj C
Suresh A
Parasuraman G
Rebekah G
Vinod E

Keywords

Bone Marrow Cells
Biomarkers
Immunohistochemistry
Growth Differentiation Factor 2
Cartilage
Cells
Cultured
Articular
Integrin alpha Chains
Cell Differentiation
Humans
Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Chondrocytes
Chondrogenesis