| Literature DB >> 28286751 |
Adegbenro Omotuyi John Fakoya1.
Abstract
The finances of patients and countries are increasingly overwhelmed with the plague of cardiovascular diseases as a result of having to chronically manage the associated complications of ischemia such as heart failures, neurological deficits, chronic limb ulcers, gangrenes, and amputations. Hence, scientific research has sought for alternate therapies since pharmacological and surgical treatments have fallen below expectations in providing the desired quality of life. The advent of stem cells research has raised expectations with respect to vascular regeneration and tissue remodeling, hence assuring the patients of the possibility of an improved quality of life. However, these supposed encouraging results have been short-lived as the retention, survival, and engraftment rates of these cells appear to be inadequate; hence, the long-term beneficial effects of these cells cannot be ascertained. These drawbacks have led to the relentless research into better ways to deliver stem cells or angiogenic factors (which mobilize stem cells) to the regions of interest to facilitate increased retention, survival, engraftment, and regeneration. This review considered methods, such as the use of scaffolds, retrograde coronary delivery, improved combinations, stem cell pretreatment, preconditioning, stem cell exosomes, mannitol, magnet, and ultrasound-enhanced delivery, homing techniques, and stem cell modulation. Furthermore, the study appraised the possibility of a combination therapy of stem cells and macrophages, considering the enormous role macrophages play in repair, remodeling, and angiogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; delivery; growth factors; ischemia; macrophages; stem cells; transplantation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28286751 PMCID: PMC5323391 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2017.00007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1Summary of vasculogenesis and angiogenesis with some molecular overview.
Figure 2ECM modification with the degradation of the basement membrane during angiogenesis.
Figure 3Redrawn from Ref. (.
Advantages and limitations of routes of delivery.
| Delivery method | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Intracoronary artery infusion | Direct infusion infarct-related coronary artery cell engraftment homogenously at infarct borders | Not applicable to occluded artery. Possible micro embolism during infusion |
| Surgical intramyocardial injection | Smaller number of cells required direct inspection | Increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Potential induction of arrhythmia. Need for a surgical approach |
| Transendocardial injection | Cell delivery in occluded areas | The risk of myocardial perforation. Cardiac tamponade and ventricular arrhythmia |
| Transvenous infusion | Non-invasive | Possible micro embolism |
Adapted from Ref. (.
Figure 4Schematic overview of tagging stem cells with SPIONs.
Figure 5Delivery of stem cells tagged with SPIONs.
Figure 6US enhanced delivery of stem cells bound microbubbles.
Markers of classical (M1) and alternative (M2) activation.
| Classical (M1) | Alternative (M2) |
|---|---|
| Fas ligand high | Arginase I/II |
| Interferon γ high | CD 163 |
| Interleukin-1β high | Fas ligand low |
| Interleukin-6 high | Basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF) |
| Interleukin-8 high | Interferon γ low |
| Interleukin-10 high | Interleukin-4 receptor I |
| Interleukin-12 high | Interleukin-6 low |
| Interleukin-23 high | Interleukin-10 high |
| Matrix metalloproteinases | Interleukin-12 low |
| Nitric oxide (NO) | Interleukin-23 low |
| Extracellular matrix destruction | Extracellular matrix reconstruction |
| Inducible NO synthase | MS-1-high molecular weight protein |
| Tumor necrosis factor α high | Transforming growth factor β |
| Tumor necrosis factor low | |
| Vascular endothelial growth factor |
Adapted from Ref. (.
A few key secretory proteins of macrophages.
| Cytokines and chemokines | Growth factors |
|---|---|
| α-2 macroglobulin | Angiotensinogen |
Adapted from Ref. (.
Figure 7Delivery of Polarized macrophages with potentiated stem cells.