| Literature DB >> 26880998 |
Ana Rita Caseiro1, Tiago Pereira1, Galya Ivanova2, Ana Lúcia Luís1, Ana Colette Maurício1.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells are posing as a promising character in the most recent therapeutic strategies and, since their discovery, extensive knowledge on their features and functions has been gained. In recent years, innovative sources have been disclosed in alternative to the bone marrow, conveying their associated ethical concerns and ease of harvest, such as the umbilical cord tissue and the dental pulp. These are also amenable of cryopreservation and thawing for desired purposes, in benefit of the donor itself or other patients in pressing need. These sources present promising possibilities in becoming useful cell sources for therapeutic applications in the forthcoming years. Effective and potential applications of these cellular-based strategies for the regeneration of peripheral nerve are overviewed, documenting recent advances and identified issues for this research area in the near future. Finally, besides the differentiation capacities attributed to mesenchymal stem cells, advances in the recognition of their effective mode of action in the regenerative theatre have led to a new area of interest: the mesenchymal stem cells' secretome. The paracrine modulatory pathway appears to be a major mechanism by which these are beneficial to nerve regeneration and comprehension on the specific growth factors, cytokine, and extracellular molecules secretion profiles is therefore of great interest.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26880998 PMCID: PMC4736584 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9756973
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Entubulation or tubulization principle for bridging severe peripheral nerve injuries with loss of nerve tissue, preventing tension-free neurorrhaphy. The sectioned nerve stumps are inserted a certain distance into the conduit and microsutured, in a tension-free manner.
Figure 2Morphological similarities between DPSCs (a) and UC-MSCs (b) (magnification: 100x), in [41]; qualitative analysis of the tridifferentiation potential of umbilical cord stroma derived MSCs by histological staining methods: adipogenic differentiation [Oil Red O staining (c)]; osteogenic differentiation [Alkaline Phosphatase staining (d)]; and chondrogenic differentiation [Alcian Blue staining (e)], in [16]; UC MSCs (f) and DPSCs (g) karyotype, to assess for chromosomal stability in terms of structure and number of chromosomes and the absence of neoplastic characteristics, demonstrating the stability and safety of the cells in usage; positive immunochemical staining of UC-MSCs for neural markers following in vitro culture in neurogenic differentiation medium. Cultured cells stained positive for (h) GFAP which is a glial cell marker; (i) GAP-43 which is related to axonal outgrowth; and (j) NeuN which is a marker for nucleus of neurons. Undifferentiated MSCs cells from Wharton's jelly presenting a negative staining for (small panel inserted in (h)) GFAP; (small panel inserted in (i)) GAP-43, and (small panel inserted in (j)) NeuN (magnification: 200x), in [17].
Examples of MSCs systems applications in peripheral nerve injury models.
| Cellular system | MSC's differentiation status | Delivery mode | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Axonotmesis lesions | rAF-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Fibrin glue + cellulose derivate membrane | [ |
| mAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Matrigel | [ | |
| hAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Systemic intravenous delivery | [ | |
| hUC-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Local injection/chitosan III membranes | [ | |
| hUC-MSCs | Undifferentiated & neuroglial differentiated | Poly(DL-lactide-e-caprolactone) (PLC) membranes | [ | |
|
| ||||
| Neurotmesis lesions | hAF-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Fibrin glue + cellulose derivate membrane | [ |
| rAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Fibrin + PHB (poly-3-hydroxybutyrate) conduit | [ | |
| rAT-MSCs | Neuroglial differentiated | Fibrin conduit | [ | |
| hAT-MSCs | Neuroglial differentiated | Chitosan coated silicon tube/silicon tube | [ | |
| rAT-MSCs | Neuroglial differentiated | PCL (polycaprolactone) conduit | [ | |
| rAT-MSCs | Neuroglial differentiated | Tethered type 1 collagen gel + collagen membrane | [ | |
| rAT-MSCs | Neuroglial differentiated | Collagen gel + xenogeneic acellular nerve matrix | [ | |
| hAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated & growth factor stimulated | Fibrin conduit | [ | |
| hAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated & neuroglial differentiated | Fibrin conduit | [ | |
| rAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated & neuroglial differentiated | Fibrin conduit | [ | |
| hAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated & neuroglial differentiated | Silastic conduit | [ | |
| rAT-MSCs | Undifferentiated & neuroglial differentiated | Local intramuscular delivery | [ | |
| mBM-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Resorbable collagen conduit | [ | |
| rBM-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Laminin-modified chitosan + silicon conduit | [ | |
| mBM-MSCs | Undifferentiated | PCL (polycaprolactone) conduit | [ | |
| rBM-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Fibrin + PCL (polycaprolactone) conduit | [ | |
| rBM-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Systemic intravenous or local intramuscular delivery | [ | |
| rBM-MSCs | Neuroglial differentiated | Fibrin conduit | [ | |
| rBM-MSCs | Undifferentiated & neuroglial differentiated | Matrigel graft | [ | |
| rDP-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Type 1 collagen gel + silicone conduit | [ | |
| rDP-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Type 1 collagen gel + silicone conduit | [ | |
| rDP-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Type 1 collagen gel + poly-DL-lactide-co-glycolide (PLGA) conduit | [ | |
| hUC-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Injected/gelatin-thrombin matrix | [ | |
| hUC-MSCs | Undifferentiated | Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), PVA-carbon nanotubes (CNTs) conduits | [ | |
| hUC-MSCs | Undifferentiated & neuroglial differentiated | Poly(DL-lactide-epsilon-caprolactone) (PLC) membranes | [ | |
h (human), m (mouse), r (rat); AF (amniotic fluid), AT (adipose tissue), BM (bone marrow), DP (dental pulp), and UC (umbilical cord tissue) derived MSCs; neuroglial differentiation includes the application of differentiation/induction protocol towards neuronal or glial phenotypes.
Figure 3Proposed strategies for in vivo preclinical assessment of MSCs and MSCs' CM-based strategies for PNS regeneration in axonotmesis and neurotmesis injuries.
Secretion of major neurotrophic and support factors by MSCs from different tissue sources.
| BDNF | bFGF | GDNF | IGF | NGF | NT-3 | NT-4/5 | VEGF | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AF | • | ° | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| AT | • | ° | ° | • | • | • | • | • |
| BM | • | ° | • | • | ° | • | • | • |
| DP | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| UC | • | • | • | — | • | • | • | • |
AF (amniotic fluid), AT (adipose tissue), BM (bone marrow), DP (dental pulp), and UC (umbilical cord tissue) derived MSCs; •: detected in cell culture supernatant/conditioned medium; °: conflicting reports on the detection of the specific factor in cell culture supernatant/conditioned medium; —: not disclosed in presented literature; and references: [38, 70, 71, 74, 78, 96, 97, 103, 111, 131–136].