| Literature DB >> 28974046 |
Silvia Baldari1, Giuliana Di Rocco2, Martina Piccoli3, Michela Pozzobon4, Maurizio Muraca5, Gabriele Toietta6.
Abstract
Cell-based therapies have the potential to revolutionize current treatments for diseases with high prevalence and related economic and social burden. Unfortunately, clinical trials have made only modest improvements in restoring normal function to degenerating tissues. This limitation is due, at least in part, to the death of transplanted cells within a few hours after transplant due to a combination of mechanical, cellular, and host factors. In particular, mechanical stress during implantation, extracellular matrix loss upon delivery, nutrient and oxygen deprivation at the recipient site, and host inflammatory response are detrimental factors limiting long-term transplanted cell survival. The beneficial effect of cell therapy for regenerative medicine ultimately depends on the number of administered cells reaching the target tissue, their viability, and their promotion of tissue regeneration. Therefore, strategies aiming at improving viable cell engraftment are crucial for regenerative medicine. Here we review the major factors that hamper successful cell engraftment and the strategies that have been studied to enhance the beneficial effects of cell therapy. Moreover, we provide a perspective on whether mesenchymal stromal cell-derived extracellular vesicle delivery, as a cell-free regenerative approach, may circumvent current cell therapy limitations.Entities:
Keywords: anoikis; cell survival; cell therapy; cell transplantation; extracellular vesicles; hypoxia; mesenchymal stromal cells; regenerative medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28974046 PMCID: PMC5666769 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18102087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic representation of the major factors limiting cell survival during the transplantation procedure and possible strategies to improve cell-based therapies. Abbreviations: ECM: extracellular matrix; ROS: reactive oxygen species.
Methods of physical and environmental cell preconditioning.
| Conditioning Method | Reference |
|---|---|
| Thermal | [ |
| Hypoxic | [ |
| Anoxic | [ |
| Acidic | [ |
| Nutrient deprivation | [ |
Pharmacologic mesenchymal cell preconditioning.
| Drug Name | Drug Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Trimetazidine | Cytoprotective, anti-ischemic | [ |
| Isoflurane | Cytoprotective | [ |
| Erythropoietin | Anti-apoptotic | [ |
| Deferoxamine: | HIF-1α stabilizer | [ |
| Dimethyloxalylglycine | HIF-1α stabilizer | [ |
| Antimycin | Mitochondrial inhibitor | [ |
| Oxytocin | Anti-oxidant | [ |
| Celastrol | Anti-oxidant | [ |
| Melatonin | Anti-oxidant | [ |
| Nicorandil | K+ channel activator | [ |
| Diazoxide | K+ channel activator | [ |
| Lipopolysaccharide | TRL4 agonist | [ |
| Pioglitazone | PPAR-γ agonists | [ |
| NaHS | H2S donor | [ |
Abbreviations: HIF-1α: hypoxia inducible factor; PPRA-γ: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor; TRL4: toll-like receptor.
Genetic engineering approach.
| Cell Type | Gene Name | Gene Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| MSC | Akt | Anti-apoptotic | [ |
| HGF | Anti-apoptotic | [ | |
| Akt and Ang-1 | Anti-apoptotic/angiogenesis | [ | |
| FGF-2 | Pro-survival | [ | |
| Hsp27 | Pro-survival | [ | |
| Survivin | Pro-survival | [ | |
| HO-1 | Anti-oxidant | [ | |
| SOD-2 | Anti-oxidant | [ | |
| tTG | Promote cell adhesion | [ | |
| CCR-1 | Promote cell homing | [ | |
| CXCR4 | Promote cell homing | [ | |
| SDF-1 | Promote cell homing | [ | |
| TERT | Telomerase | [ | |
| miR-21, -24, -221 | Pro-survival | [ | |
| miR-133a | Pro-survival | [ | |
| miR-210 | Pro-survival | [ | |
| CM; SMCs; HEP | Bcl-2 | Anti-apoptotic | [ |
| SMC | IGF-1 | Pro-survival | [ |
| EPC | ILK-1 | Promote cell adhesion | [ |
| CPC | Pim-1 | Anti-apoptotic | [ |
Abbreviations: Akt: protein kinase B; Ang-1: angiotensin; CM: cardiomyoblasts; CCR-1: C–C chemokine receptor type 1; CPCs: cardiac progenitor cells; CXCR4: CXC chemokine receptor 4; EPCs: endothelial progenitor cells; FGF-2: fibroblast growth factor; HEP: hepatocytes; HGF: hepatocyte growth factor; Hsp: heat-shock protein; IGF-1 insulin growth factor-1; ILK-1: integrin-linked kinase; OH-1: heme oxygenase; SDF-1: stromal cell-derived factor-1; SMCs: smooth muscle cells; SOD-2: superoxide dismutase; TERT: telomerase; tTG: tissue transglutaminase.