| Literature DB >> 24728412 |
Jürgen Dittmer1, Benjamin Leyh1.
Abstract
Stem cells play an important role in tissue repair and cancer development. The capacity to self-renew and to differentiate to specialized cells allows tissue-specific stem cells to rebuild damaged tissue and cancer stem cells to initiate and promote cancer. Mesenchymal stem cells, attracted to wounds and cancer, facilitate wound healing and support cancer progression primarily by secreting bioactive factors. There is now growing evidence that, like mesenchymal stem cells, also tissue-specific and cancer stem cells manipulate their environment by paracrine actions. Soluble factors and microvesicles released by these stem cells have been shown to protect recipient cells from apoptosis and to stimulate neovascularization. These paracrine mechanisms may allow stem cells to orchestrate wound healing and cancer progression. Hence, understanding these stem cell-driven paracrine effects may help to improve tissue regeneration and cancer treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24728412 PMCID: PMC4063537 DOI: 10.3892/ijo.2014.2385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Oncol ISSN: 1019-6439 Impact factor: 5.650
Paracrine actions of stem cells in tissue regeneration and cancer.
| Lesion | Stem cell (SC)/progenitor cell (PC) type | Secreted factor | Function | Comment | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Myocardial infarction | Cardiac SC | SDF-1 | Survival of cardiomyocytes | Induces STAT3 activation | ( |
| VEGF, bFGF | Angiogenesis | ( | |||
| Mesenchymal SC | CM | Myocard repair | Induces STAT3 activation | ( | |
| VEGF, bFGF, Cyr61 | Angiogenesis | ( | |||
| 20 S proteasomes via exosomes | Survival of cardiomyocytes | Reduces accumulation of misfolded proteins | ( | ||
| Endothelial PC | SDF-1 | Myocard repair | ( | ||
| Thymosin β4 | Improvement of endothelial function | ( | |||
| Skeletal muscle-derived SC | VEGF | Angiogenesis | Higher VEGF levels by mechanical stretching | ( | |
| Stroke | Central nervous system SC | VEGF | Neovascularization | ( | |
| Neural PC | Thrombospondin 1 and 2 | Higher axonal transport and dendritic branching | ( | ||
| Spinal cord injury | Neural PC | NGF, BDNF | Stimulation of axonal outgrowth | ( | |
| Mesenchymal SC | VEGF | Angiogenesis | ( | ||
| Acute kidney injury | Tubular adult renal PC | Inhibin A, microvesicles | Survival and proliferation of tubular cells | Inhibin A probably transmitted via microvesicles | ( |
| Mesenchymal SC | Microvesicles | Survival and proliferation of tubular cells | ( | ||
| Chronic kidney injury | Mesenchymal SC | CM | Reduction of tubular and glomular damage | Exosomes are not involved | ( |
| Liver cirrhosis | Haemotopoietic SC | CM | Survival of liver cells | CXCL chemokines may be involved | ( |
| Glioma | CD133+ glioma SC | CM | Immunosuppression | Requires STAT3 activation in CSCs | ( |
| VEGF, SDF-1 | Angiogenesis | ( | |||
| Colon cancer | CD133+ colon SC | IL-4, ALDH1A1, BLMH | Chemoresistance | ( | |
| Mesenchymal SC | PAI-1 | Stimulates migration | ( | ||
| Skin papillomas | Skin papilloma SC | VEGF | Angiogenesis, maintains stemness | ( | |
| Renal cancer | CD105+renal cancer SC | Exosomes | Angiogenesis, lung metastasis | Exosomes contain VEGF-RNA | ( |
ALDH1A1, aldehyde dehydrogenase family 1, member A1; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; bFGF, basic fibroblast growth factor; BLMH, bleomycin hydrolase; CM, conditioned medium; Cyr61, cysteine-rich angiogenic inducer 61; IL-4, interleukin-4; NGF, nerve growth factor; PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1; SDF-1, stromal cell derived factor-1; STAT3, signal transducer and activator of transcription 3; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor.
Figure 1.Pro-angiogenic effects of stem cells in tissue repair and cancer.