| Literature DB >> 29017529 |
Razwa Saleh1, Hasan Mahmud Reza2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The human umbilical cord has been studied extensively in the past two decades. It is free of ethical dilemmas, non-tumorigenic, and less immunogenic and thus provides a significant advantage over other stem cell sources. The cord lining yields both mesenchymal and epithelial stem cells. The mesenchymal cells have been appraised at length by many researchers, which led to the current review focusing on the cord lining epithelial cells (CLECs). These cells have high proliferative capacity and their superior harvest and multiplication, using the revolutionary CellOptimaTM technology, makes them better candidates in comparison to contemporary adult stem cells. Following 30 replication cycles these cells have been observed to retain their stemness, with their phenotype and karyotype intact. However, their remarkable immunosuppressant properties, protecting self as well as co-transplanted allografts from rejection, are what truly define their transplantation potential. They have been successfully applied to many chronic conditions, using animal models, including type 1 diabetes, limbal stem cell deficiency, burn injuries, and wound healing, etc. with encouraging results.Entities:
Keywords: Cord lining cells; Epithelial stem cell; Mesenchymal stem cell; Ocular therapy; Wound healing
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29017529 PMCID: PMC5634865 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-017-0679-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Differentiation potential for cord lining epithelial cells
Comparison of umbilical cord lining epithelial cells with other contemporary stem cell sources
| ESCs | Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) | Bone marrow-derived stem cells (adult stem cells) | Umbilical cord lining epithelial stem cells | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | • Pluripotent stem cell source | • Pluripotent cells | • Multipotent stem cells | • Multipotent stem cells |
| Tumorigenicity | • Characteristically produce teratomas | • MYC used in cell line generation is oncogenic | • Genetically modified cells can generate teratomas through proto-oncogenic activation | • Highly proliferative but do not produce tumors |
| Immunogenecity | In undifferentiated state: | Initially, T-cell-mediated autoimmune rejection observed in: | • Long history of safety in clinical trials | • Express MHC class I molecules HLA- A, B, and C as well as the non-classic HLA-G and -E |
Abbreviations: ESC embryonic stem cell, HLA human leukocyte antigen, iPSC induced pluripotent stem cell, MHC major histocompatibility complex, NK natural killer
Comparison of umbilical cord lining cells against other extra-embryonic tissue derived stem cells
| Source | Cell types | Yield | GVHD | Ease of isolation | Immunomodulation by HLA–G and E | Proliferation and expansion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Umbilical cord blood | HSCs, MSCs, EpSCs, | Low yield of MSCs and ESCs, high yield of HSCs | Lower incidence of chronic GVHD | Low MSC level requires highly refined isolation techniques | No expression | Slow expansion and engraftment |
| Wharton’s Jelly | MSCs | High | Improvement with acute steroid-resistant GVHD | Possible heterogeneous cell contamination | No expression | Easily and rapidly expanded |
| Cord lining | CLECs, CLMSCs | Highest yield (potentially six billion MSCs and six billion EpSCs per lining) | Dramatic improvements with MSCs without additional immunosuppressant use | Time-consuming isolation process | CLECs express HLA-G and E | Highest proliferation and migration capacity |
| Placenta | AMSCs, AECs, DSCs | Low | Placental DSCs relatively effective against acute and chronic GVHD | Longer isolation process compared to cord-derived cells | Expresses HLA-G and E | Limited proliferation capacity of hAECs |
Abbreviations: AMSC amniotic mesenchymal stem cell, AEC amniotic epithelial stem cell, CLEC cord lining epithelial stem cell, CLMSC cord lining mesenchymal stem cell, DSC decidual stromal cell, EpSC epithelial stem cell, GVHD graft versus host disease, HSC hematopoetic stem cell, HLA human leukocyte antigen, MSC mesenchymal stem cell
Studies outlining the progress and understanding of umbilical cord lining-derived epithelial cells published since the year 2000
| Year | Author | Primary findings |
|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Lund et al. [ | Human umbilical cord tissue in photoreceptor rescue |
| 2008 | Reutze et al. [ | Comparison between CLECs and epidermal keratinocytes |
| 2009 | Sivalingam et al. [ | Transgene integration in CLECs |
| 2009 | Branski et al. [ | Stem cell therapy in cutaneous wound healing |
| 2011 | Zhou et al. [ | Characterization and transplantation potential of CLECs |
| 2011 | Reza et al. [ | Characterization of a novel cell line, CLEC-muc |
| 2011 | Huang et al. [ | CLECs potential for epidermal reconstitution |
| 2011 | Reza et al. [ | CLEC-muc in ocular regeneration |
| 2012 | Huang et al. [ | Updated review on stem cell applications in burns and wounds |
| 2012 | Liras et al. [ | Advanced therapies for hemophilia including transgene integration in CLECs |
| 2013 | Cheong et al. [ | Derivation of hepatocyte-like cells from CLECs |
| 2014 | Lim et al. [ | Review on CLSCs |
| 2014 | Cai et al. [ | Characterization of the immunological properties of CLECs for allotransplantation |
| 2014 | Zhou et al. [ | Hepatic-like cloned CLECs show potential in regeneration of hepatectomized liver |
| 2015 | Ang et al. [ | CLEC-muc as novel feeder layer for human stem cells |
| 2016 | Sivalingam et al. [ | Successful zinc finger nuclease-mediated integration and secretion of FVIII in CLECs for treatment of hemophilia A |
The studies relate to the characterization of the cord lining epithelial cell types, their various uses investigated in the past decade in terms of contribution to possible cure of chronic disorders, possible applicability in conjugation with gene therapy, and lastly their use as feeder layers for supporting other stem cell lines. Abbreviations: CLEC cord lining epithelial cell, CLSC cord lining stem cell, CLEC-muc Mucin1-expressing cord lining epithelial cells
Fig. 2The potential clinical applications of epithelial cells derived from umbilical cord lining