| Literature DB >> 28929099 |
Claudia Lo Sicco1, Roberta Tasso2.
Abstract
Although autologous tissue transplantation represents a valid approach for bone repair, it has encountered crucial barriers in therapeutic translation, not least the invasive process necessary for stem cell isolation. In recent years, the scientific community has made significant strides for identifying new treatment options, and great emphasis has been placed on the tight interaction between skeletal and immune system in modulating the outcome of bone repair. Within the context of specific injury environmental cues, the cross talk among inflammatory cells and tissue resident and/or circulating progenitor cells is crucial to finely coordinate repair and remodeling processes. The appropriate modulation of the inflammatory response can now be considered a new trend in the field of regenerative medicine, as it raises the attracting possibility to enhance endogenous progenitor cell functions, finally leading to tissue repair. Therefore, new treatment options have been developed considering the wide spectrum of bone-inflammation interplay, considering in particular the cell intrinsic cues responsible for the modulation of the injured environment. In this review, we will provide a panoramic overview focusing on novel findings developed to uphold endogenous bone repair.Entities:
Keywords: bone repair; circulating progenitor cells; endogenous progenitor cells; inflammation; injury microenvironment; regenerative medicine; skeletal progenitor cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 28929099 PMCID: PMC5591576 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2017.00052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Schematic depicting endogenous regenerative responses underpinning bone tissue repair. The injury-generated environment is enriched of growth factors, chemokines, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines as well as hypoxic stimuli that evoke feedbacks to the niches, deploying programs for endogenous progenitor activation, mobilization, and recruitment to the healing site. The healing process involves either circulating progenitor cells or tissue-specific progenitors.
Resident and circulating progenitors involved in adult bone repair.
| Name | Markers | >Localization | Activation stimuli | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Periosteal stem/progenitors | Sca-I+ CD105+ SSEA-4+ CD29+ CD140+ | Periosteum | Hedgehog (Hh) signaling pathway | Wang et al. ( | |
| Bone, cartilage, stromal progenitor | CD45− Ter119− Tie2− AlphaV+ CD105+ CD200+ | Growth plate | Hh. BMP. FGF, and Notch signaling pathways | Chang et al., ( | |
| Osteochondroreticular stem cells | CD45− Ter119− CD31− Grem1+ | Growth plate and trabecular bone | BMP signaling pathway | Worthley et al. ( | |
| Connective tissue progenitors | ALP+ | Peripheral blood | Injury-associated signals | Kumagai et al. ( | |
| Circulating osteogenic precursors | CXCR4+ CD44+ CD45− | Peripheral blood | BMP-2 signaling pathway | Otsuru et al. ( | |
| Myeloid CD34+ | CD34+ OC+ | Peripheral blood | SDF-1 signaling pathway | Matsumoto et al. ( | |
| Human osteoblast lineages cells | OC+ BAP+ | Peripheral blood | BMP signaling pathway | Eghbali-Fatourechi et al. ( | |
| Circulating healing cells | Lineage− CD45− | Peripheral blood | Injury-associated signals | Lo Sicco et al. ( |