| Literature DB >> 24724094 |
Jun-Ichi Kawabe1, Naoyuki Hasebe1.
Abstract
Atherosclerosis is considered an "inside-out" response, that begins with the dysfunction of intimal endothelial cells and leads to neointimal plaque formation. The adventitia of large blood vessels has been recognized as an active part of the vessel wall that is involved in the process of atherosclerosis. There are characteristic changes in the adventitial vasa vasorum that are associated with the development of atheromatous plaques. However, whether vasa vasorum plays a causative or merely reactive role in the atherosclerotic process is not completely clear. Recent studies report that the vascular wall contains a number of stem/progenitor cells that may contribute to vascular remodeling. Microvessels serve as the vascular niche that maintains the resident stem/progenitor cells of the tissue. Therefore, the vasa vasorum may contribute to vascular remodeling through not only its conventional function as a blood conducting tube, but also its new conceptual function as a stem cell reservoir. This brief review highlights the recent advances contributing to our understanding of the role of the adventitial vasa vasorum in the atherosclerosis and discusses new concept that involves vascular-resident factors, the vasa vasorum and its associated vascular-resident stem cells, in the atherosclerotic process.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24724094 PMCID: PMC3960518 DOI: 10.1155/2014/701571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Resident progenitor cells within the vasculature.
| Location | Name | Selection method | Markers | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adventitia | Vascular progenitor cells |
| Sca1+ | Differentiate into |
Hu et al., 2004 [ |
| Vascular progenitor cells |
| CD34+ |
|
Campagnolo et al., 2010 [ | |
| (Saphenous vein-derived progenitor cells; | After culture in the presence of serum, CD34 were subsided, and the following markers were increased: | ||||
|
(CD34+ cKit+ cells were located at perivascular sites of the | CD29+, CD44+, CD105+, SOX2+, Nestin+, NG2+ (CD146−) | Act as | |||
| Adventitial stem cells |
| CD34+ | CD34+ CD146− cells display |
| |
| CD31−, CD146−, and CD45− | |||||
| These cells acquired a | |||||
| Adventitial pericyte progenitor cells |
| NG2+, CD146+, PDGFR+ |
|
Tigges et al., 2013 [ | |
| Some of these cells also express CD29+, CD90+ | |||||
| NG2/CD146+ cells were increased in the adventitia of the injured vasculature | |||||
|
| |||||
| Vasculogenic zone |
|
| CD34+, KDR (VEGFR2)+, Tie2+ |
|
Zengin et al., 2006 [ |
| CD105−, CD144− | |||||
| (CD34+ cells located at the “ | |||||
| Angiogenic MSCs | Adherent culture condition (cells were isolated from human thoracic artery, and select the adherent cells forming colony ) | MSC markers (CD44+, CD90+, CD105+, etc.) | Differentiate into |
| |
| CD45−, CD146−, vWF− | (These cells were heterogenous) | ||||
| (CD34+ cKit+ cells were enriched in the | It is uncertain whether the isolated cells are equivalent of CD34− stained cells within thoracic aorta | ||||
|
| |||||
| Media | Side population-progenitor cells | Side population of cells from the tunica media of mouse aorta | Sca1+, cKit(dim), | Differentiate into |
|
| CD34−, lineage negative | (These cells were heterogenous) | ||||
| Multipotent vascular stem cells ( |
| SM-MHC(−), Sox1+, Nestin+ |
|
Tang et al., 2012 [ | |
| CD146−, CD34−, CD31− | |||||
| Differentiate into | |||||
EPCs: endothelial progenitor cells; MSCs: mesenchymal stem cells; NSCs: neuronal stem cells; ECs: endothelial cells; SMCs: smooth muscle cells; PCs: pericytes. Vasculogenic zone: the border between the media and adventitial layer.
Stem cell/hematopoietic markers: CD34, Sca1, and cKit.
MSC markers: CD29, CD44, CD90, and CD105.
EC markers: CD31, vWF, and VEGFR.
Figure 1Role of the vasa vasorum in atherosclerosis. In atherosclerotic plaque, the vasa vasorum leads to the microvascular leakage that is responsible for hemorrhage and accumulation of inflammatory cells within plaque. Vasa vasorum also serves as the vascular niche for the vascular-resident stem cells (VSCs), including multipotent pericytes and endothelial progenitor cells. Vasa vasorum acts not only as the blood conduit tube but also as a stem cell reservoir to supply VSCs into the intima. VSCs can differentiate into several cells, such as vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs), endothelial cells (ECs), and fibroblasts, and can contribute to the atherosclerotic remodeling. Some of VSCs act as pericytes (PCs) to stabilize the vasculature, which attenuate the leakage of blood cells within plaques.