| Literature DB >> 25999916 |
Gerard Ruiz-Babot1, Irene Hadjidemetriou1, Peter James King1, Leonardo Guasti1.
Abstract
Adrenal disease, whether primary, caused by defects in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, or secondary, caused by defects outside the HPA axis, usually results in adrenal insufficiency, which requires lifelong daily replacement of corticosteroids. However, this kind of therapy is far from ideal as physiological demand for steroids varies considerably throughout the day and increases during periods of stress. The development of alternative curative strategies is therefore needed. In this review, we describe the latest technologies aimed at either isolating or generating de novo cells that could be used for novel, regenerative medicine application in the adrenocortical field.Entities:
Keywords: SF1; adrenal cortex; encapsulation; regeneration; stem cells; steroidogenesis; transplantation; zonation
Year: 2015 PMID: 25999916 PMCID: PMC4422080 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2015.00070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Details of published studies on adrenocortical or adrenogonwadal reprograming.
| PMID | Article | Cells | Origin | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9199334 | Crawford PA, et al. | Embryonic stem cells (ESC) | Mouse (RW4 129/SvJ) | Stable transfection of SF1 |
| 15569155 | Gondo S, et al. | Bone marrow stem cells (BMCs) | Mouse [C57BL/6Tg14 (act-EGFP)osbY01] | Adenovirus SF1 |
| 16728492 | Yazawa T, et al. | Bone marrow stem cells (BMCs) | Human (hMSChTERT-E6/E7) | Stable transfection of SF1 |
| 17975261 | Tanaka T, et al. | Bone marrow stem cells (BMCs) | Human (commercial cell line) | Adenovirus SF1 |
| 18566117 | Gondo S, et al. Endocrinology (2008) | Adipose mesenchymal cells (AMCs) | Mouse (C57BL/6J) (B6) | Adenovirus SF1 |
| 19359379 | Yazawa T, et al. | Bone marrow stem cells (BMCs) | Human (hMSChTERT-E6/E7) | Retrovirus SF1/LRH-1 |
| 20133449 | Yazawa T, et al. | Umbilical cord blood (UCB-MSCs) | Human (umbilical cord blood) | Retrovirus SF1 |
| 21129436 | Yazawa T, et al. | Embryonic stem cells (ESC) | Mouse (EBRTcH3) | Retrovirus (inducible SF1) |
| 21610156 | Jadhav U, et al. | Embryonic stem cells (ESC) | Mouse (R1 ES cell line) | Stable transfection of SF1 |
| 21764617 | Mazilu JK, et al. | Mesoderm-derived cells | Human | Adenoviral SF1/Dax1/Cited2/Pbx1/WT1 |
| 22324479 | Wei X, et al. | Umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (UC-MSCs) | Human (umbilical cord) | Adenovirus SF1 |
| 22778223 | Sonoyama T, et al. | Embryonic Stem cell (ESC) iPS (from fibroblasts) | Human (H9 and KhES1) human (201B7) | Mesoderm diff. and nucleofection SF1 |
Figure 1This figure outlines novel and tested strategies for the treatment of adrenal insufficiency. Human embryonic stem (ES) cells (A) as well as somatic cells (such as fibroblasts, hair follicle dermal papillae, adipose tissue-derived stem cells, and urine-derived stem cells) established from human donors (B) can be cultured in vitro and induced to acquire an adrenocortical phenotype (C) through specific differentiation protocols. A gene-editing step can be included in case of monogenic disorders. Reprogramed cells that have successfully acquired an adrenocortical phenotype could then be implanted back into a donor, either inside an encapsulation device (D) or inside a decellularized adrenal of human or large-animal origin (G). While autotransplantation (H) has been trailed in humans in pioneering surgery during the 1960s (see text) and allotransplantation (E) has been a poorly tested option, xenotransplantation (F) has never been tested in humans.