| Literature DB >> 28589127 |
Feifei Li1,2, Xia Guo1, Shi-You Chen1.
Abstract
Atherosclerosis is a complicated disorder and largely attributable to dyslipidaemia and chronic inflammation. Despite therapeutic advances over past decades, atherosclerosis remains the leading cause of mortality worldwide. Due to their capability of immunomodulation and tissue regeneration, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have evolved as an attractive therapeutic agent in various diseases including atherosclerosis. Accumulating evidences support the protective role of MSCs in all stages of atherosclerosis. In this review, we highlight the current understanding of MSCs including their characteristics such as molecular markers, tissue distribution, migratory property, immune-modulatory competence, etc. We also summarize MSC functions in animal models of atherosclerosis. MSC transplantation is able to modulate cytokine and chemokine secretion, reduce endothelial dysfunction, promote regulatory T cell function, decrease dyslipidemia, and stabilize vulnerable plaques during atherosclerosis development. In addition, MSCs may migrate to lesions where they develop into functional cells during atherosclerosis formation. Finally, the perspectives of MSCs in clinical atherosclerosis therapy are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: atherosclerosis; characteristics; functional properties; mesenchymal stem cells; therapeutics
Year: 2017 PMID: 28589127 PMCID: PMC5438961 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2017.00032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) treatments against atherosclerosis in animal models.
| Reference | MSCs sources/dose | Route | Animal model | Mechanism of MSC action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fang et al. ( | Bone marrow | Allogeneic | New Zealand rabbits | PAI-1, hs-CRP, MMPs ↓ |
| 1 × 107 cells | Intra-arterial | Collagen fibers ↑ | ||
| Wang et al. ( | Bone marrow | Allogeneic | ApoE−/− mice | CD4+CD25+FOXP3+ Tregs ↑ |
| 107 cells | Intravenous | CD36, SRA ↓ | ||
| Lin et al. ( | Bone marrow | Allogeneic | ApoE−/− mice | IL8, MIP-2, eNOS ↑ |
| 2 × 105 cells | Intravenous | |||
| Frodermann et al. ( | Bone marrow | Allogeneic | LDLR−/− mice | Circulating monocytes ↓ |
| 0.5 × 106 cells | Intravenous | CD4+ T cells, CCL2, IFN-γ↓ | ||
| TNF-α, serum cholesterol level ↓ | ||||
| Tregs ↑ | ||||
| Wang et al. ( | Bone marrow | Allogeneic | New Zealand rabbits | hs-CRP, TNF-α, IL-6, NF-κB ↓ |
| 1 × 107 cells | Intravenous | MMPs, cell apoptosis ↓ | ||
| TSG-6, IL-10 ↑ | ||||
| Abdel-Kawi and Hashem ( | Cord blood | Allogeneic | Albino rats | iNOS ↑ |
| 3 × 106 cells | Intravenous | |||
| Li et al. ( | Skin | Allogeneic | ApoE−/− mice | PGE2, IL-10 ↑ |
| Intravenous | TNF-α, NF-κB ↓ | |||