| Literature DB >> 30460233 |
Christina L O'Neill1, Kiran J McLoughlin1, Sarah E J Chambers1, Jasenka Guduric-Fuchs1, Alan W Stitt1, Reinhold J Medina1.
Abstract
For over a decade various cell populations have been investigated for their vasoreparative potential. Cells with the capacity to promote blood vessel regeneration are commonly known as endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs); although such a definition is currently considered too simple for the complexity of cell populations involved in the reparative angiogenic process. A subset of EPCs called endothelial colony forming cells (ECFCs) have emerged as a suitable candidate for cytotherapy, primarily due to their clonogenic progenitor characteristics, unequivocal endothelial phenotype, and inherent ability to promote vasculogenesis. ECFCs can be readily isolated from human peripheral and cord blood, expanded ex vivo and used to revascularize ischemic tissues. These cells have demonstrated efficacy in several in vivo preclinical models such as the ischemic heart, retina, brain, limb, lung and kidney. This review will summarize the current pre-clinical evidence for ECFC cytotherapy and discuss their potential for clinical application.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; cell therapy; endothelial colony forming cells (ECFCs); endothelial progenitor cells (EPC); ischemia; vascular repair
Year: 2018 PMID: 30460233 PMCID: PMC6232760 DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2018.00273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Med (Lausanne) ISSN: 2296-858X
Figure 1Properties of ECFCs. (A) ECFC cobblestone monolayer morphology (Scale bar 200 μm). (B) A tight monolayer of ECFCs with adherens junctions (β catenin = green, Vimentin = red, scale bar 100 μm). (C) A colony derived from a single cell demonstrating clonogenic potential of ECFCs (crystal violet stained, scale bar 200 μm). (D) ECFCs express endothelial markers CD31 & CD146 and are negative for hematopoietic markers CD14/45 and stromal marker CD90. (E) ECFCs have tubulogenic capacity in vitro (scale bar 200 μm) (F,G). ECFCs form perfused vessels in vivo in the Matrigel plug assay (Scale bar, 5 mm and 200 μm respectively).
Summary of Pre-clinical studies using ECFCs in various disease models.
| Pre-clinical model | Mouse oxygen induced retinopathy | Mouse ischemic stroke | Mouse hindlimb ischemia | Pig myocardial infarction | Mouse tissue injury | Rat oxygen induced bronchopulmonary dysplasia | Mouse bilateral kidney I/R injury |
| ECFC source | Human cord blood | Human cord blood | Human cord blood | Pig peripheral blood | Human cord blood | Human cord blood | Human cord blood |
| Delivery | intra-vitreal | Intra-arterial | Intra-muscular | Intra-arterial | Intra-jugular | Intra-jugular | Intra-jugular |
| Results | Promote vasoreperfusion | Improve neurological function & blood brain barrier integrity | Increase perfusion & vessel density | Increase blood vessel density | Induce wound vascularization | Improve lung compliance & architecture of alveoli | Attenuate I/R-induced renal injury & renal superoxide formation |
| Integration into host vasculature | Direct integration and formation of new blood vessels detected 72 h post-delivery | Not detected to integrate within the vasculature | Direct incorporation into vasculature detected 20 days post delivery | Engraft into host myocardium | Integrate into host vasculature & form functional hybrid vessels detected 10 days post delivery | Low engraftment in recipient lung vasculature 14 days post delivery | Barely detectable in any tissue 24 h post delivery |
| Paracrine Function | Promote vascular repair through release of paracrine factors | Increased expression of pro-angiogenic growth factors | Function as paracrine mediators by modulating msc engraftment | Induce secretion of angiogenic cytokines at ischemic site | Secreted factors enhance collagen matrix organization, promote migration & proliferation of keratinocytes | ECFC-CM showed similar therapeutic effects to ECFCs | Secrete exosomes as primary mediators of anti-apoptotic effect |
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