| Literature DB >> 29684038 |
Rebeca Blázquez1,2, Francisco Miguel Sánchez-Margallo1,2, Verónica Álvarez1, Elvira Matilla3, Nuria Hernández3, Federica Marinaro1, María Gómez-Serrano4, Inmaculada Jorge2,4, Javier G Casado1,2, Beatriz Macías-García3.
Abstract
Endometrial Mesenchymal Stromal Cells (endMSCs) are multipotent cells with immunomodulatory and pro-regenerative activity which is mainly mediated by a paracrine effect. The exosomes released by MSCs have become a promising therapeutic tool for the treatment of immune-mediated diseases. More specifically, extracellular vesicles derived from endMSCs (EV-endMSCs) have demonstrated a cardioprotective effect through the release of anti-apoptotic and pro-angiogenic factors. Here we hypothesize that EV-endMSCs may be used as a co-adjuvant to improve in vitro fertilization outcomes and embryo quality. Firstly, endMSCs and EV-endMSCs were isolated and phenotypically characterized for in vitro assays. Then, in vitro studies were performed on murine embryos co-cultured with EV-endMSCs at different concentrations. Our results firstly demonstrated a significant increase on the total blastomere count of expanded murine blastocysts. Moreover, EV-endMSCs triggered the release of pro-angiogenic molecules from embryos demonstrating an EV-endMSCs concentration-dependent increase of VEGF and PDGF-AA. The release of VEGF and PDGF-AA by the embryos may indicate that the beneficial effect of EV-endMSCs could be mediating not only an increase in the blastocyst's total cell number, but also may promote endometrial angiogenesis, vascularization, differentiation and tissue remodeling. In summary, these results could be relevant for assisted reproduction being the first report describing the beneficial effect of human EV-endMSCs on embryo development.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29684038 PMCID: PMC5912768 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0196080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Description of the study and methodological design.
Fig 2Phenotypical characterization and differentiation potential of endMSCs.
(A) Flow cytometry analysis of endMSCs isolated from menstrual blood. A representative histogram together with the expression levels is shown. The expression of cell surface markers is represented as the percentage of positive cells (black lined histogram) above the negative control (grey lined histogram). (B) In vitro differentiation potential of endMSCs. The cells were in vitro cultured for 21 days with standard medium (Control) or with specific differentiation media for adipogenic, osteogenic and chondrogenic lineages (Induced). Differentiation towards adipocytes, osteocytes and chondrocytes was evidenced by Oil Red O, Alizarin Red and Alcian Blue 8GX respectively. Scale bar: 100 μm. (C) The adipogenic (above), osteogenic (middle) and chondrogenic (below) differentiation degree was quantified by determining the absorbance of the extracts at 490 nm (Oil Red O and Alizarin Red S staining) and at 600 nm (Alcian Blue 8GX). Four independent experiments using four different cell lines were performed and a Mann-Whitney U test was used. p-values are shown in the figure.
Fig 3Characterization of EV-endMSCs.
(A) Representative graph of nanoparticle tracking analysis to quantify size distribution and particle concentration of EV-endMSCs. (B) Flow cytometry analysis on EV-endMSCs for exosomal markers CD9 and CD63. A representative histogram together with the expression levels is shown. The expression of cell surface markers is represented as as the percentage of positive cells (black lined histogram) above the negative control (grey lined histogram).
Embryo development to the blastocyst stage and hatching rates.
| Treatment | Initial 2 cell embryos | Blastocyst (%) | Hatching (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 53 | 86.8a | 20.5a |
| 10 μg/ml EV-endMSCs | 56 | 98.2a | 39.0a,b |
| 20 μg/ml EV-endMSCs | 57 | 92.9a | 54.1b |
| 40 μg/ml EV-endMSCs | 49 | 79.6a | 47.6b |
| 80 μg/ml EV-endMSCs | 53 | 84.9a | 40a,b |
The initial number of 2 cell embryos retrieved in uterus (n) as well as blasocyst rate in % and hatching embryos in % is provided (hatching rates were calculated as the number of blastocysts that hatched/total blastocyst number per treatment); different superscripts represent statistically significant differences (p<0.05).
Fig 4Total cell number of murine blastocysts cultured in presence or absence of EV-endMSCs.
Total cell number of the obtained expanded blastocysts was obtained after Hoechst 33342 staining and subsequent evaluation by fluorescence microscopy. For each treatment, the individual blastomere count is represented. Horizontal bars show the mean values. All the treatments differ statistically from the control (p<0.05). Representative micrographs of expanded blastocysts cultured with varying dosages of EV-endMSCs are shown.
Fig 5Quantification of VEGF and PDGF-AA secreted during embryo culture.
Soluble factors released by the developing embryos co-cultured with EV-endMSCS were quantified by the Luminex xMAP technology at the third day of embryo culture. (A) PDGF-AA secreted by blastocyst embryos. All the data were compared by Student t-test for paired comparisons with respect to control group. The mean (dotted line) ±SD from four independent experiments, as well as individual measures (rhombuses), are shown. (B) VEGF secreted by blastocyst embryos. All the data were compared by Student t-test for paired comparisons with respect to control group. The mean (dotted line) ±SD from four independent experiments, as well as individual measures (rhombuses), are shown. (C) Correlation between PDGF-AA and VEGF. Correlation line as well as individual measures (rhombuses) are represented. The Pearson correlation coefficient (r) together with its significance level (p) is shown.