| Literature DB >> 26715856 |
Abstract
Tendon injuries are a common cause of physical disability. They present a clinical challenge to orthopedic surgeons because injured tendons respond poorly to current treatments without tissue regeneration and the time required for rehabilitation is long. New treatment options are required. Stem cell-based therapies offer great potential to promote tendon regeneration due to their high proliferative, synthetic, and immunomodulatory activities as well as their potential to differentiate to the target cell types and undergo genetic modification. In this review, I first recapped the challenges of tendon repair by reviewing the anatomy of tendon. Next, I discussed the advantages and limitations of using different types of stem cells compared to terminally differentiated cells for tendon tissue engineering. The safety and efficacy of application of stem cells and their modified counterparts for tendon tissue engineering were then summarized after a systematic literature search in PubMed. The challenges and future research directions to enhance, optimize, and standardize stem cell-based therapies for augmenting tendon repair were then discussed.Entities:
Keywords: stem cells; tendon injuries; tendon repair; tendon tissue engineering
Year: 2015 PMID: 26715856 PMCID: PMC4685888 DOI: 10.2147/SCCAA.S60832
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Cloning ISSN: 1178-6957
Figure 1Anatomy of a tendon.
Advantages and limitations of different cell sources for tendon tissue engineering
| Pluripotency | Cell type | Advantages (common) | Advantages (specific) | Disadvantages (common) | Disadvantages (specific) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Terminally-differentiated cells | Skin fibroblast | • Low risk of teratoma formation | • Easily available tissue source for cell isolation | • Highly differentiated cells with limited proliferation rate and healing ability | • Non-tenocytes that are not specialized for maintaining homeostasis of tendon and TBJ |
| Tendon fibroblast | • Major cell type in tendon responsible for the production of ECM in tendon and TBJ | • Few tenocytes in tendon | |||
| Pluripotent stem cells | ESC | • Unlimited proliferative capacity | • Risk of teratoma formation | • Ethical concern with the use of embryos for cell isolation | |
| iPSC | • Easily available tissue source for cell isolation | • Slow and inefficient reprogramming protocols | |||
| Multipotent stem cells | BMSC | • Less safety concern due to limited self-renewal potential and confined multilineage differentiation potential of cells of mesodermal lineage | • Aging and loss of multilineage differentiation potential with in vitro cell passaging | • Reported incidence of ectopic bone formation after transplantation | |
| ADSC | • Higher yield, clonogenicity, proliferation rate, and some lineage differentiation potential compared to BMSCs | • Additional surgery and pain for cell isolation for autologous transplantation | |||
| TDSC | • Likely imprinted to produce tendon and junctional tissues under the influence of local environmental niche | • Donor site morbidity and hence not practical for autologous transplantation | |||
| AMSC | • Higher proliferation rate compared to BMSCs | • Can only be isolated from mothers/newborns | |||
| UCB-MSC | • Higher proliferation rate compared to BMSCs | • Can only be isolated from mothers/newborns |
Abbreviations: TBJ, tendon to bone junction; ESC, embryonic stem cell; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cell; BMSC, bone marrow-derived stem cell; ADSC, adipose-derived stem cell; TDSC, tendon-derived stem cell; AMSC, amniotic tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cell; UCB-MSC, umbilical cord blood-mesenchymal stem cell; ECM, extracellular matrix; MSC, mesenchymal stem cells.