Cell metabolism is a key determinant factor for the pluripotency and fate commitment of Stem Cells
(SCs) during development, ageing, pathological onset and progression. We derived and cultured
selected subpopulations of rodent fetal, postnatal, adult Neural SCs (NSCs) and postnatal glial
progenitors, Olfactory Ensheathing Cells (OECs), respectively from the subventricular zone (SVZ) and
the olfactory bulb (OB). Cell lysates were analyzed by proton Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (1H-NMR)
spectroscopy leading to metabolites identification and quantitation. Subsequent multivariate analysis
of NMR data by Principal Component Analysis (PCA), and Partial Least Square Discriminant Analysis
(PLS-DA) allowed data reduction and cluster analysis. This strategy ensures the definition of specific
features in the metabolic content of phenotypically similar SCs sharing a common developmental
origin. The metabolic fingerprints for selective metabolites or for the whole spectra demonstrated
enhanced peculiarities among cell types. The key result of our work is a neat divergence between
OECs and the remaining NSC cells. We also show that statistically significant differences for selective
metabolites characterizes NSCs of different ages. Finally, the retrived metabolome in cell cultures
correlates to the physiological SC features, thus allowing an integrated bioengineering approach for
biologic fingerprints able to dissect the (neural) SC molecular specificitie