Literature DB >> 28771328

Directing Stem Cell Fate: The Synthetic Natural Product Connection.

Trevor C Johnson1, Dionicio Siegel2.   

Abstract

Stem cells possess remarkable potential for the treatment of a broad array of diseases including many that lack therapeutic options. However, the use of cell-based products derived from stem cells as therapeutics has limitations including rejection, sufficient availability, and lack of appropriate engraftment. Chemical control of stem cells provides potential solutions for overcoming many of the current limitations in cell-based therapeutics. The development of exogenous molecules to control stem cell self-renewal or differentiation has arrived at natural product-based agents as an important class of modulators. The ex vivo production of cryopreserved cellular products for use in tissue repair is a relatively new area of medicine in which the conventional hurdles to implementing chemicals to effect human health are changed. Translational challenges centered on chemistry, such as pharmacokinetics, are reduced. Importantly, in many cases the desired human tissues can be evaluated against new chemicals, and approaches to cellular regulation can be validated in the clinically applicable system. As a result linking new and existing laboratory syntheses of natural products with findings of the compounds' unique abilities to regulate stem cell fate provides opportunities for developing improved methods for tissue manufacture, accessing probe compounds, and generating new leads that yield manufactured cells with improved properties. This review provides a summary of natural products that have shown promise in controlling stem cell fate and which have also been fully synthesized thereby providing chemistry platforms for further development.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28771328     DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.7b00015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chem Rev        ISSN: 0009-2665            Impact factor:   60.622


  5 in total

1.  Thymoquinone-Mediated Modulation of Toll-like Receptors and Pluripotency Factors in Gingival Mesenchymal Stem/Progenitor Cells.

Authors:  Mohamed Mekhemar; Johannes Tölle; Yasmine Hassan; Christof Dörfer; Karim Fawzy El-Sayed
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2022-04-25       Impact factor: 7.666

Review 2.  Salvadora persica: Nature's Gift for Periodontal Health.

Authors:  Mohamed Mekhemar; Mathias Geib; Manoj Kumar; Yasmine Hassan; Christof Dörfer
Journal:  Antioxidants (Basel)       Date:  2021-04-30

Review 3.  Nigella sativa and Thymoquinone: A Natural Blessing for Periodontal Therapy.

Authors:  Mohamed Mekhemar; Yasmine Hassan; Christof Dörfer
Journal:  Antioxidants (Basel)       Date:  2020-12-11

4.  Bimodal Imaging-Visible Nanomedicine Integrating CXCR4 and VEGFa Genes Directs Synergistic Reendothelialization of Endothelial Progenitor Cells.

Authors:  Bingbo Yu; Bing Dong; Jiang He; Hui Huang; Jinsheng Huang; Yong Wang; Jianwen Liang; Jianning Zhang; Yumin Qiu; Jun Shen; Xintao Shuai; Jun Tao; Wenhao Xia
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2020-11-09       Impact factor: 16.806

Review 5.  Innate immunity and immunotherapy for hemorrhagic shock.

Authors:  Qingxia Huang; Song Gao; Yao Yao; Yisa Wang; Jing Li; Jinjin Chen; Chen Guo; Daqing Zhao; Xiangyan Li
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2022-08-25       Impact factor: 8.786

  5 in total

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