| Literature DB >> 27516776 |
Abstract
Regenerative medicine, the most recent and emerging branch of medical science, deals with functional restoration of tissues or organs for the patient suffering from severe injuries or chronic disease. The spectacular progress in the field of stem cell research has laid the foundation for cell based therapies of disease which cannot be cured by conventional medicines. The indefinite self-renewal and potential to differentiate into other types of cells represent stem cells as frontiers of regenerative medicine. The transdifferentiating potential of stem cells varies with source and according to that regenerative applications also change. Advancements in gene editing and tissue engineering technology have endorsed the ex vivo remodelling of stem cells grown into 3D organoids and tissue structures for personalized applications. This review outlines the most recent advancement in transplantation and tissue engineering technologies of ESCs, TSPSCs, MSCs, UCSCs, BMSCs, and iPSCs in regenerative medicine. Additionally, this review also discusses stem cells regenerative application in wildlife conservation.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27516776 PMCID: PMC4969512 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6940283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cell Biol ISSN: 1687-8876
Figure 1Promises of stem cells in regenerative medicine: the six classes of stem cells, that is, embryonic stem cells (ESCs), tissue specific progenitor stem cells (TSPSCs), mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), umbilical cord stem cells (UCSCs), bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs), and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), have many promises in regenerative medicine and disease therapeutics.
Application of stem cells in regenerative medicine: stem cells (ESCs, TSPSCs, MSCs, UCSCs, BMSCs, and iPSCs) have diverse applications in tissue regeneration and disease therapeutics.
| SCs | Disease | Factors causing disease | Mode of stem cells application | Physiological and mechanistic aspects of stem cells therapeutics | Improvements in disease signatures & future use | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ESCs | Spinal cord injuries | Infection, cancer, and accidents | ESCs transplantation to injury site | ESCs and secreted vasculogenic and neurogenic factor support tissue homing | Regeneration of spinal tissue and improved balance and sensation | [ |
| ARMD and glaucoma | Macular cones degeneration | ESCs-derived cones and RGCs transplantation to eye | COCO (activating TGF- | Recovery from ARMD and macular defects & restoration of vision | [ | |
| Cardiovascular disease | Diabetes, drugs, genetic factor, and life style | ESCs-derived CMs & biomaterial coaxed ESCs | Cardiomyocytes express GCaMP3, secreting vasculogenic factors, and Tbox3 differentiates ESCs into SANPCs | Suppresses heart arrhythmias. CMs electrophysiologically integrate to heart as pacemaker | [ | |
| Liver injuries | Toxins, drugs, genetic factors, and infection | Transplantation of ESCs-derived hepatocytes | ESCs-hepatocyte conversion is marked with expression of Cytp450, PXR, CYPA4&29, HNF4- | Regeneration of liver tissue can be used as model for screening of drugs | [ | |
| Diabetes | Life style, heart defects, and genetics | Transplantation of ESCs-derived PPCs | Progenitors (CD24+, CD49+ & CD133+) differentiate into | Improvement in glucose level and obesity can be used for treatment of T1DM and T2DM | [ | |
| Osteoarthritis | When cartilage tissue wears away | Transplantation of chondrocytes organoids | Chondrocytes (SOX9+ & collagen-II+) form cells aggregate & remain active for 12 wks at transplantation site | Regeneration of cartilage tissue can be used for treatment of injuries faced by athletes | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| TSPSCs | Diabetes | Life style and genetic factors | Transplantation of SCs derived PPCs organoid | PPCs need niche supported active FGF & Notch signalling to become | PPCs occupancy as | [ |
| Neurodental problems | Accidents, age, and genetic factors | Transplantation of DSPSCs as neurons | Neurons express nestin, GFAP, | Possible application in treatment of neurodental abnormalities | [ | |
| Acoustic problems | Age, noise, drugs, and infection | IESCs/IESCs-derived hair cells transplantation |
| Cochlear regeneration leads to restoration of acoustic functions | [ | |
| Intestinal degeneration | Genetic factors and food borne infections | IPCs derived crypt-villi organoid transplantation | M | Regeneration of goblet mucosa can treat intestinal defects | [ | |
| Corneal diseases | Burns, genetics, and inflammation | LPSCs transplantation to corneal tissue | LPSCs in transplant marked by ABCB5 differentiate into mature cornea | Regeneration of corneal tissue might treat multiple eye disease | [ | |
| Muscular deformities | Infection, drugs, and autoimmunity | Transplantation of PEG fibrinogen coaxed MABs | PDGF from MABs attract vasculogenic and neurogenic cells to transplant site | Muscle fibril regeneration; skeletal muscle defects treatment | [ | |
| Eye disease & retinopathy | Toxins, burns, and genetic factors | AdSCs intravitreal transplantation | AdSCs from healthy donor produce higher vasoprotective factors | Restoration of vascularisation, diabetic retinopathy treatment | [ | |
| Cardiac dysfunctions | Age, genetic factors, and toxins | Systemic infusion of CA-AdSCs myocardium | CA-AdSCs to epithelium differentiation are superior to AdSCs | Regeneration of ischemic myocardium | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| MSCs | Bladder deformities | Cystitis, cancer, and infection | Transplantation of BD-MSCs to bladder | BDMSCs (CD105+, CD73+, CD34−, and CD45−) with SIS heal bladder in 10 wks | Bladder regeneration from different origins MSCs | [ |
| Dental problems | Infection, cancer age, and accidents | Transplants of EMSCs + DSCs biopolymer tissue | EMSC-DSCs and vasculogenic factors in biopolymer give rise to mature teeth units | Regeneration of oral tissue and application in periodontics | [ | |
| Bone degeneration | Injuries and tumor autoimmunity | Coaxed MSCs transplant & MSCs infusion | Actin modelling by cytochalasin-D transforms MSCs into osteoblasts | Regeneration of bones, reduction in injury pain | [ | |
| Muscle degeneration | Genetic factors and work stress | Coaxed MSCs transplant and MSCs infusion | Alginate gel protects MSCs from immune attack and controls GFs release | Regeneration of heart scar and muscle tissue in controlled way | [ | |
| Alopecia | Age, disease, and medicine use | Transplantation of GAG-coated DPCs | GAG coating mimics ECM microenvironment, promoting DPCs regeneration | Regeneration of hair follicle for treatment of alopecia | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| UCSCs | Congenital heart defects | Developmental errors | Transplantation of fibrin coaxed AFSCs | Addition of VEFG to PEG coaxed AFSCs promotes organogenesis | Regeneration of tissue repair for treatment of heart defects | [ |
| Diabetes | Life style and genetic factors | WJ-SCs, transplantation, and intravenous injection | WJ-factors & M | Improvement in function of | [ | |
| SLE | Autoimmunity | Intravenous infusion of WJ-SCs | WJ-SCs decrease SLEDAI & BILAG; reinfusion protects from disease relapse | Improvement in renal functions & stopping degeneration of tissues | [ | |
| LSD & neurodegenerative diseases | Genetics, tumor, age, and life style | Allogenic UCSCs cells and biomaterial coaxed UCSCs organoids | Organoids consisted of neuroblasts (GFAP+, Nestin+, and Ki67+) & SCs (OCT4+, SOC2+); UCSCs recover from MSE deficiency and improve cognition | Treatment of Krabbe's disease, hurler syndrome, MLD, TSD, ALD, AD, ALS, SCI, SCI, TBI, Parkinson's, stroke, and so forth | [ | |
| Cartilage and tendon injuries | Accident | Transplantation of UCB-SCs, UCB-SCs-HA gel | HA gel factors promote regeneration of hyaline cartilage & tendons in wks time | Recovery from tendons and cartilage injuries | [ | |
| Hodgkin's lymphoma | Genetic and environmental | Transplantation of UCSCs | Second dose infection of allogenic UCSCs improves patients life by 30% | Treatment of Hodgkin's lymphoma and other cancers | [ | |
| Peritoneal fibrosis | Long term renal dialysis and fibrosis | WJ-SCs, transplantation by IP injection | WJ-SCs prevent programmed cells death and peritoneal wall thickness | Effective in treatment of encapsulating peritoneal fibrosis | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| BMSCs | Anaemia and blood cancer | Injury, genetics autoimmunity | Two-step infusion of lymphoid and myeloid | Haplo identical BMSCs can reconstruct immunity, which is major process for minority | Treatment of aplastic anaemia & haematological malignancies | [ |
| AIDS | HIV1 infection | Transplantation of HIV1 resistant CD4+ cells | Anti-HIV1 CD4+ cells express HIV1 anti-RNA, which restrict HIV infection | Treatment of AIDS as an alternative of antiretroviral | [ | |
| Blood clotting disorders | Lack of platelets | Transplantation of megakaryocyte organoids | GFs in silk sponge, microtubule 3D scaffolds mimic bone marrow | Therapeutics of burns and blood clotting diseases | [ | |
| Neurodegenerative diseases | Accidents, age, trauma, and stroke | Focal transplant of BMSCs with LA | LA+BMSCs induce neovascularisation that directs microglia for colonization | Treatment of neuronal damage disorders and cognitive restoration | [ | |
| Orodental deformities | Trauma, disease, and birth defects | Bone marrow derived stem & progenitor (TRC) | CD14+ & CD90+ TRC accelerate alveolar jaw bone regeneration | Regeneration of defects in oral bone, skin, and gum | [ | |
| Diaphragm abnormalities | Accidents & birth defects | Implantation of decellularized diaphragm | BMSCs niche perfused hemidiaphragm has similar myography & spirometry | Replacement therapy by donor derived niched diaphragm | [ | |
|
| ||||||
| iPSCs | Eye defects | Age, genetics, and birth defects | iPSCs derived NPCs transplantation | NPCs form 5-6 layers of photoreceptor nuclei, restoring visual acuity | Treatment of ARMD and other age-related eye defects | [ |
| Neurodegenerative disorders | Accidents, age, trauma, and stroke | iGABA-INs and cortical spheroid transplantation | (iGABA-INs) secrete GABA; FOX1G cause ASD, spheroid mimics to brain | ASD, Alzheimer's, seizer, and obstinate epilepsies treatment | [ | |
| Liver & lung diseases | A1AD deficiency | Transplantation of A1AD mutation corrected iPSCs | A1AD is encoded by SERPINA1 in liver, and mutation leads to drugs sensitivity | Treatment of COPD causing lungs and liver degeneration | [ | |
| Diabetes | Life style and genetic factors | iPSCs derived | Skin to | Treatment of T1DM and T2DM and insulin production | [ | |
| Lung degeneration | Tuberculosis, cancer, and fibrosis | Biomaterial coaxed iPSCs transplantation | Miniature iPSCs lung resembles airways and alveoli, model drug testing | Regeneration of lung tissue | [ | |
| SIDs and AIDS | Age, genetic factors, and infection | Transplantation of Oct4 and Nanog corrected iPSCs | CRISPER-Cas9 generate iPSCs in single step; iPSCs-M | Immunotherapy of SIDs, HIV1, and other immune diseases | [ | |
Figure 2ESCs in regenerative medicine: ESCs, sourced from ICM of gastrula, have tremendous promises in regenerative medicine. These cells can differentiate into more than 200 types of cells representing three germ layers. With defined culture conditions, ESCs can be transformed into hepatocytes, retinal ganglion cells, chondrocytes, pancreatic progenitor cells, cone cells, cardiomyocytes, pacemaker cells, eggs, and sperms which can be used in regeneration of tissue and treatment of disease in tissue specific manner.
Figure 3TSPSCs in regenerative medicine: tissue specific stem and progenitor cells have potential to differentiate into other cells of the tissue. Characteristically inner ear stem cells can be transformed into auditory hair cells, skin progenitors into vascular smooth muscle cells, mesoangioblasts into tibialis anterior muscles, and dental pulp stem cells into serotonin cells. The 3D-culture of TSPSCs in complex biomaterial gives rise to tissue organoids, such as pancreatic organoid from pancreatic progenitor, intestinal tissue organoids from intestinal progenitor cells, and fallopian tube organoids from fallopian tube epithelial cells. Transplantation of TSPSCs regenerates targets tissue such as regeneration of tibialis muscles from mesoangioblasts, cardiac tissue from AdSCs, and corneal tissue from limbal stem cells. Cell growth and transformation factors secreted by TSPSCs can change cells fate to become other types of cell, such that SSCs coculture with skin, prostate, and intestine mesenchyme transforms these cells from MSCs into epithelial cells fate.
Figure 4MSCs in regenerative medicine: mesenchymal stem cells are CD73+, CD90+, CD105+, CD34−, CD45−, CD11b−, CD14−, CD19−, and CD79a− cells, also known as stromal cells. These bodily MSCs represented here do not account for MSCs of bone marrow and umbilical cord. Upon transplantation and transdifferentiation these bodily MSCs regenerate into cartilage, bones, and muscles tissue. Heart scar formed after heart attack and liver cirrhosis can be treated from MSCs. ECM coating provides the niche environment for MSCs to regenerate into hair follicle, stimulating hair growth.
Figure 5UCSCs in regenerative medicine: umbilical cord, the readily available source of stem cells, has emerged as futuristic source for personalized stem cell therapy. Transplantation of UCSCs to Krabbe's disease patients regenerates myelin tissue and recovers neuroblastoma patients through restoring tissue homeostasis. The UCSCs organoids are readily available tissue source for treatment of neurodegenerative disease. Peritoneal fibrosis caused by long term dialysis, tendon tissue degeneration, and defective hyaline cartilage can be regenerated by UCSCs. Intravenous injection of UCSCs enables treatment of diabetes, spinal myelitis, systemic lupus erythematosus, Hodgkin's lymphoma, and congenital neuropathies. Cord blood stem cells banking avails long lasting source of stem cells for personalized therapy and regenerative medicine.
Figure 6BMSCs in regenerative medicine: bone marrow, the soft sponge bone tissue that consisted of stromal, hematopoietic, and mesenchymal and progenitor stem cells, is responsible for blood formation. Even halo-HLA matched BMSCs can cure from disease and regenerate tissue. BMSCs can regenerate craniofacial tissue, brain tissue, diaphragm tissue, and liver tissue and restore erectile function and transdifferentiation monocytes. These multipotent stem cells can cure host from cancer and infection of HIV and HCV.
Figure 7iPSCs in regenerative medicine: using the edge of iPSCs technology, skin fibroblasts and other adult tissues derived, terminally differentiated cells can be transformed into ESCs-like cells. It is possible that adult cells can be transformed into cells of distinct lineages bypassing the phase of pluripotency. The tissue specific defined culture can transform skin cells to become trophoblast, heart valve cells, photoreceptor cells, immune cells, melanocytes, and so forth. ECM complexation with iPSCs enables generation of tissue organoids for lung, kidney, brain, and other organs of the body. Similar to ESCs, iPSCs also can be transformed into cells representing three germ layers such as pacemaker cells and serotonin cells.
Figure 8Stem cells in wildlife conservation: tissue biopsies obtained from dead and live wild animals can be either cryopreserved or transdifferentiated to other types of cells, through culture in defined culture medium or in vivo maturation. Stem cells and adult tissue derived iPSCs have great potential of regenerative medicine and disease therapeutics. Gonadal tissue procured from dead wild animals can be matured, ex vivo and in vivo for generation of sperm and egg, which can be used for assistive reproductive technology oriented captive breeding of wild animals or even for resurrection of wildlife.