| Literature DB >> 25157812 |
Danian Qin, Ting Long, Junhong Deng, Yuanyuan Zhang.
Abstract
Engineered bladder tissues, created with autologous bladder cells seeded on biodegradable scaffolds, are being developed for use in patients who need cystoplasty. However, in individuals with organ damage from congenital disorders, infection, irradiation, or cancer, abnormal cells obtained by biopsy from the compromised tissue could potentially contaminate the engineered tissue. Thus, an alternative cell source for construction of the neo-organ would be useful. Although other types of stem cells have been investigated, autologous mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are most suitable to use in bladder regeneration. These cells are often used as a cell source for bladder repair in three ways - secreting paracrine factors, recruiting resident cells, and trans-differentiation, inducing MSCs to differentiate into bladder smooth muscle cells and urothelial cells. Adult stem cell populations have been demonstrated in bone marrow, fat, muscle, hair follicles, and amniotic fluid. These cells remain an area of intense study, as their potential for therapy may be applicable to bladder disorders. Recently, we have found stem cells in the urine and the cells are highly expandable, and have self-renewal capacity and paracrine properties. As a novel cell source, urine-derived stem cells (USCs) provide advantages for cell therapy and tissue engineering applications in bladder tissue repair because they originate from the urinary tract system. Importantly, USCs can be obtained via a noninvasive, simple, and low-cost approach and induced with high efficiency to differentiate into bladder cells.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25157812 PMCID: PMC4055102 DOI: 10.1186/scrt458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the origin and biological characteristics of urine-derived stem cells (USCs). USCs, a subpopulation of cells isolated from urine, possess biological characteristics similar to mesenchymal stem cells.
Comparison of various stem cell types used for bladder repair
| Self-renewal and expansion capability | Limited, PD ~30 | | High, PD 60-70 | Very high, PD >200 | Limited, PD <30 |
| Multi-lineage differentiation capability | Multipotent, but mainly limited within mesodermal cell lineages [ | Similar to BMSCs [ | Multipotent differentiation potential [ | Pluri-potent (can form all lineages of the body) [ | None |
| Urothelial and endothelial differentiation capability | Low (<10%) | Low (10%) | High (60-85%) [ | Low | |
| Telomerase activity (TA)/telomere length | Cannot be detected | Cannot be detected | Up to 75% USC clones possess TA and relatively long telomeres | Possess TA and long telomeres | None |
| Harvesting approach | Invasive | Invasive | Non-invasive, simple, cost-low, safe [ | Invasive to harvest somatic cells for iPSCs | Invasive |
| Pure stem cell isolation | Difficult | Difficult | Very easy | Easy | None |
| Number of stem cells harvested | 1 MSC/104 bone marrow stromal cells in new borns, 1 MSC/106[ | | 100-140 USC clones/24 hour urine in adult [ | | Unknown |
| Angiogenic trophic factors | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unknown | Moderate |
| Immuno-modulatory properties | Yes | Yes | Yes | Unknown | Unknown |
| Rejection after implanted | No rejection reaction as allogenous or even xenogenous cells (for example, human BMSCs, USCs) implanted in rodent, rabbit, or canine models | Likely to be rejected | No rejection as autogenous cells | ||
| Oncogenic potential | No | No | No | Yes | None |
| Clinic trial utility | Potential | Potential | Potential | Safety concern | Yes |
ASC, adipose-derived stem cell; BMSC, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cell; ESC, embryonic stem cell; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cell; MSC, mesenchymal stem cell; PD, population doubling; SMC, smooth muscle cell; UC, urothelial cell; USC, urine-derived stem cell.