A Comparative Study of the Effects of Sodium Selenite and Glutathione Mono Ethyl Ester on Aged Adipose-Derived Stem Cells: The Telomerase and Cellular Responses.

Title A Comparative Study of the Effects of Sodium Selenite and Glutathione Mono Ethyl Ester on Aged Adipose-Derived Stem Cells: The Telomerase and Cellular Responses.
Authors N. Aminizadeh; T. Tiraihi; S.Alireza Mesbah-Namin; T. Taheri
Journal Rejuvenation Res
DOI 10.1089/rej.2017.1961
Abstract

The proliferation and differentiation potential of adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) decline with aging. Moreover, Alzheimer's disease is associated with progressive decline in cholinergic neurons. The purpose of this study is to enhance the proliferation potential of aged rat ADSCs and their differentiation into cholinergic neurons. The ADSCs were collected from aged male rats cultured and treated with different concentrations of sodium selenite for 3 days or glutathione mono ethyl ester (GSH-MEE) for 1 day. Incubating the ADSCs with 27?nM sodium selenite for 3 days significantly increased the relative cell proliferation, compared with the control, without any change in the telomerase activity, the related telomerase gene expression, and the telomere length, but it does improve differentiation of the aged ADSCs to cholinergic neuron-like cells. GSH-MEE at a concentration of 2?mM for 1 day resulted in increased relative cell proliferation, but it did not change the telomerase activity, the related telomerase gene expression, the telomere length, and differentiation potential. Sodium selenite is more effective than GSH-MEE in improving the aged ADSCs' properties. However, both did not have any effect on telomerase activity.

Citation N. Aminizadeh; T. Tiraihi; S.Alireza Mesbah-Namin; T. Taheri.A Comparative Study of the Effects of Sodium Selenite and Glutathione Mono Ethyl Ester on Aged Adipose-Derived Stem Cells: The Telomerase and Cellular Responses.. Rejuvenation Res. 2017. doi:10.1089/rej.2017.1961

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Selenium

Selenium Bohr ModelSee more Selenium products. Selenium (atomic symbol: Se, atomic number: 34) is a Block P, Group 16, Period 4 element with an atomic radius of 78.96. The number of electrons in each of Selenium's shells is 2, 8, 18, 6 and its electron configuration is [Ar] 3d10 4s2 4p4. The selenium atom has a radius of 120 pm and a Van der Waals radius of 190 pm. Selenium is a non-metal with several allotropes: a black, vitreous form with an irregular crystal structure three red-colored forms with monoclinic crystal structures and a gray form with a hexagonal crystal structure, the most stable and dense form of the element. Elemental SeleniumOne of the most common uses for selenium is in glass production the red tint that it lends to glass neutralizes green or yellow tints from impurities in the glass materials. Selenium was discovered and first isolated by Jöns Jakob Berzelius and Johann Gottlieb Gahn in 1817. The origin of the name Selenium comes from the Greek word "Selênê," meaning moon.

Sodium

Sodium Bohr ModelSee more Sodium products. Sodium (atomic symbol: Na, atomic number: 11) is a Block D, Group 5, Period 4 element with an atomic weight of 22.989769. The number of electrons in each of Sodium's shells is [2, 8, 1] and its electron configuration is [Ne] 3s1. The sodium atom has a radius of 185.8 pm and a Van der Waals radius of 227 pm. Sodium was discovered and first isolated by Sir Humphrey Davy in 1807. In its elemental form, sodium has a silvery-white metallic appearance. It is the sixth most abundant element, making up 2.6 % of the earth's crust. Sodium does not occur in nature as a free element and must be extracted from its compounds (e.g., feldspars, sodalite, and rock salt). The name Sodium is thought to come from the Arabic word suda, meaning "headache" (due to sodium carbonate's headache-alleviating properties), and its elemental symbol Na comes from natrium, its Latin name.

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