| Literature DB >> 26509164 |
Carmela R Balistreri1, Silvio Buffa1, Calogera Pisano2, Domenico Lio1, Giovanni Ruvolo2, Giuseppe Mazzesi3.
Abstract
Advanced knowledge in the field of stem cell biology and their ability to provide a cue for counteracting several diseases are leading numerous researchers to focus their attention on "regenerative medicine" as possible solutions for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). However, the lack of consistent evidence in this arena has hampered the clinical application. The same condition affects the research on endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), creating more confusion than comprehension. In this review, this aspect is discussed with particular emphasis. In particular, we describe biology and physiology of EPCs, outline their clinical relevance as both new predictive, diagnostic, and prognostic CVD biomarkers and therapeutic agents, discuss advantages, disadvantages, and conflicting data about their use as possible solutions for vascular impairment and clinical applications, and finally underline a very crucial aspect of EPCs "characterization and definition," which seems to be the real cause of large heterogeneity existing in literature data on this topic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26509164 PMCID: PMC4609774 DOI: 10.1155/2015/835934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Origins and sources of EPCs cells.
| Stem and progenitor cells | Features and functions | References |
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| Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) | Limited differentiation capacity compared to embryonic stem cells | [ |
| H-myeloid cells | Mobilized from bone marrow | [ |
| H-mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) | Limited differentiation capacity compared to embryonic stem cells | [ |
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| Fat tissue | Can be obtained in large quantities under local anesthesia with minimal discomfort |
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| Liver and intestine | Progenitor cells derived from transplanted liver and intestine contribute to neovascularization after hind limb ischemia | |
| Spleen | Can differentiate to give an “EPC phenotype” and modulate endothelial function or vascular remodelling | |
| Kidney | Pax-2+ cells displaying mesenchymal markers | |
| Skeletal myoblasts | First cells to be injected into the ischemic myocardium as part of a cell-based strategy | |
| Blood vessel wall | MSCs cells also called pericytes or adventitial cells | |
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| Greater plasticity than adult cells due to their prenatal origin | [ | |
Key players involved in modulating circulating EPC levels and functions.
| Factors | Effects | References |
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| Aging | It determines a decrease in progenitor cells activity and mobilization | [ |
| Inflammation | Restricted acute inflammatory response stimulates EPCs mobilization while persistent chronic inflammatory stimuli have deleterious effects and result in decreased number of circulating mature and functional EPCs | [ |
| Oxidative stress | It reduces EPCs number, induces apoptosis, and reduces EPCs capacity of mobilization, migrating, and incorporating into vasculature | [ |
| Hypothyroidism | It decreases CD34+/CD133+/KDR+ EPCs | [ |
| Cardiovascular risk factors (smoking, diabetes, hypertension, lipid disorders, abdominal obesity, metabolic syndrome, etc.) | They influence the circulating levels of EPCs; precisely they reduce their levels | [ |
| Hyperparathyroidism | It increases circulating EPCs levels | [ |
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| Gender | It upregulates VEGF and SDF-1 | [ |
| Pregnancy | It increases EPCs-derived colonies | [ |
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| Antihypertensive drugs | [ | |
| Calcium channel blockers (CCBs) nifedipine and barnidipine | They enhance EPC number and function | |
| Angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB) telmisartan | It enhances EPC number and function | |
| Angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors | They improves clonogenic capacity | [ |
| Cholesterol lowering medications | ||
| Statines (atorvastatin, rosuvastatin) | They increase mobilization of EPCs and CD34+/CD117+, CD34+/CXCR4+ | [ |
| Antidiabetic medications | ||
| Oral dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor (sitagliptin) | It increases number of circulating EPCs in patients with diabetes | [ |
| Thiazolidinedione/metformin | They improve EPCs number and function | |
| Other drugs | ||
| Estradiol | It improves capacity of neovascularization | [ |
| PPAR- | It increases EPCs migration | [ |
| CXCR4 agonists | They stimulate SC mobilization |
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| AMD3100 (plerixafor) | It increases CD34+, CD117+, and CD133+ cells | |
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| Erythropoietin | It increases EPC and HSC levels | [ |
| Nitroglycerin (chronic use) | It increases apoptosis and decreases phenotypic differentiation and migration | [ |
| Granulocytes colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) | It induces SC mobilization by interruption of CXCR4/CXCL12, c-Kit/SCF, and VLA-4/VCAM-1 axis | [ |
| Growth hormone | It reduces apoptosis |
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| It improves EPCs migratory capacity | ||
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| Red wine resveratrol, salvianolic acids, Gingko Biloba, ginsenoside, berberine, and puerarine. | They exert anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects | [ |
| Diet | It affects the number of circulating EPCs | [ |
| Dietary cocoa-derived flavonoids | They increase number of functional circulating angiogenic cells | [ |
| Red ginseng extracts | They increase EPCs number | [ |
| Physical exercise | It improves circulating EPCs levels. Prolonged 4-week exercise program improves EPCs functions. Maximal and endurance exercise influence the number of both EPCs and hematopoietic stem cells. | [ |
Surface markers used in EPC identifying.
| Molecules | Biological features and relevance in EPC detection |
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| CD34 | 105- to 120-kD transmembrane cell surface glycoprotein, selectively expressed (within human and murine hematopoietic systems) on stem and progenitor cells, and initially used by Asahara and colleagues for EPC identifying. It is not specific and expressed by mature endothelial cells as well as HSCs [ |
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| VEGFR2 | A kinase insert domain receptor (KDR) or Flk-1, or CD309, suggested as further marker for identifying circulating EPC cells. It is expressed mainly on EC cells, and besides EPC cells, in low number, on osteoblasts, pancreatic duct cells, neuronal cells, and lung epithelial cells, even if the biological role in nonendothelial cells remains unclear. VEGFR2 has been shown to be a vital promoter of pathological neovascularization, including cancer and diabetic retinopathy, by making it a potential target in therapy of these diseases. However, neither of these markers is specific for EPCs, either alone or together. Vascular endothelial cells, expressing CD34 and VEGFR2, are not considered to be EPCs [ |
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| CD133 | Also known as AC133. It is a marker of immature stem cells, proposed as the third marker for EPCs. Thus, EPCs have been identified as VEGFR-2+/CD133+/CD34+ cells. However, more than 99% of CD34+/KDR+/CD133+ triple positive cells also express CD45, which is a pan leukocyte marker, even if these cells are not able to give rise to EPCs capable of highly differentiating in endothelial cells. As such, CD45 expression on putative EPCs became a bone of contention [ |
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| CD31 | Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1, also defined as PECAM [ |
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| CD146 |
S-endo, P1H12 antigen [ |
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| VWF | Von Willebrand factor [ |
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| eNos | Endothelial nitric oxide synthase [ |
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| E-selectin | Also known as CD62 antigen-like family member E (CD62E). Endothelial-leukocyte adhesion molecule-1 (ELAM-1), or leukocyte-endothelial cell adhesion molecule 2 (LECAM2), is a cell adhesion molecule expressed only on endothelial cells activated by cytokines [ |
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| C-kit | The protooncogene c-kit is a 145,000 Dalton transmembrane glycoprotein designed as CD117. This receptor tyrosine kinase and its ligand stem cell factor (SDF) mediate pleiotropic functions, including cell survival, differentiation, homing, migration, and proliferation as well as functional activation. It is present on the surface of cells of the mast cell and erythroid lineage as well as on multipotent stem and progenitor cells and megakaryocytes [ |
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| CXCR4 | Also known as fusion or leukocyte-derived seven transmembrane-domain receptor (LESTR). It represents the receptor of SDF-1, highly expressed on the surface of CD34 positive cells [ |
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| UEA-I | Ulex europaeus lectin [ |
Figure 1The several origins and sources of EPC cells.
Figure 2Endothelium dysfunction, injury, cardiovascular remodeling and onset of CVD diseases. Several factors (ageing, hypertension, oxidative stress, diabetes, hyperlipemia, obesity, and unbalance of hormones) by acting as triggers determine a chronic stress on endothelium of vascular wall and evocation of a chronic inflammatory response which cause endothelium dysfunction, injury, and cardiovascular remodeling and the onset of several CVDs.
EPCs therapeutic applications.
| Preclinical studies in animal models | References | |
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| Rat model of myocardial infarction | Intravenous injection of | [ |
| Swine model of myocardial infarction | Catheter-based intramyocardial transplantation of EPCs leads to encouraging outcome | [ |
| Rat model of diabetes | Infusion of | [ |
| Rat model of chronic cerebral ischemia | Injection of CD34+ HSC cells (including EPCs) improves neurological functions | [ |
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| Skin autograft of CD34+ cells transfected with recombinant nonreplicative Herpes virus vector results in vector-gene expression and determines an increase in local angiogenesis | [ |
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| Pathological CVD conditions | ||
| Myocardial infarction | Endovenous administration of G-CSF as mobilizing factor for BM-derived progenitor cells improves left ventricular function | [ |
| Intracoronary infusion of BM-derived progenitor cells improves left ventricular function (TOPCARE-AMI and BOOST trials) | [ | |
| Diffuse coronary heart disease and angina pectoris | Transepicardial and transendocardial injection of unfractioned BM cells improve left ventricular function and physical capacity | [ |
| Chronic limb ischemia | Direct administration of EPCs determines a reduced rate of limb's amputation at three-year follow-up | [ |
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| Pathological CVD conditions | ||
| Chronic limb ischemia | Intramuscular injection of autologous BM-derived mononuclear cells containing 1% of CD34+ cells determines a local increase in endothelial markers (CD133 and VE-cadherin) | [ |
| Symptomatic coronary atherosclerosis | Administration of autologous EPCs expanded for four days in culture improves endothelial function and wall motion abnormalities, showing a benefic effect on the metabolism in the target area | [ |
| Chronic limb ischemia | Intramuscular injection of autologous BM mononuclear cells improves local neovascularization (TACT study) and significantly lowers amputation rate at 3-year follow-up | [ |
Methods and ways for the administration of EPCs cells.
| First strategy: intravenous administration | BM-MSCs are transfused into the left ventricular cavity. Stem cells mainly reach the lungs, with significantly smaller amounts in the liver, heart, and spleen. | [ |
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| Second strategy: intracoronary infusion | Patients are infused with BM-progenitor cells using a balloon catheter after restoration of arterial patency | [ |
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| Third strategy: Transepicardial administration | Direct transepicardial injection of BMSCs can be performed, using a surgical thoracotomy into the border zone of the infarct | [ |
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| Third strategy: transendocardial administration | Catheter-based transendocardial injection of SCs using electromechanical voltage mapping to define tissue viability | [ |
Figure 3Critical aspects of the EPC relevance as possible solutions for vascular impairment and clinical applications. As reported in the figure and text (see Section 5), four critical aspects reduce the EPC potentiality as potential actors of endothelium repair, optimal CVD biomarkers, and therapy agents.
Figure 4Angioblast differentiation into mature endothelial cells according to the schema proposed by Hristov and Weber, 2004 [75]. As illustrated in the figure, CD133+, CD34+, and VEGFR2+ (CD309+) angioblasts give rise to early EPCs expressing high intensity CD31, CD34, and CD309 markers which differentiate in late outgrowth endothelial cells (OEC)s, having high expression not only of CD34, CD309, and CD31 but also of vWF, E-selectin, VE-cadherin, and eNOs.
Figure 5Our working hypothesis on the possible steps to perform to overcome the critical limitations and problems of EPC research and to develop real therapeutic applications.