| Literature DB >> 30922387 |
Azar Nourian Dehkordi1, Fatemeh Mirahmadi Babaheydari2, Mohammad Chehelgerdi3, Shiva Raeisi Dehkordi4.
Abstract
Normal wound healing is a dynamic and complex multiple phase process involving coordinated interactions between growth factors, cytokines, chemokines, and various cells. Any failure in these phases may lead wounds to become chronic and have abnormal scar formation. Chronic wounds affect patients' quality of life, since they require repetitive treatments and incur considerable medical costs. Thus, much effort has been focused on developing novel therapeutic approaches for wound treatment. Stem-cell-based therapeutic strategies have been proposed to treat these wounds. They have shown considerable potential for improving the rate and quality of wound healing and regenerating the skin. However, there are many challenges for using stem cells in skin regeneration. In this review, we present some sets of the data published on using embryonic stem cells, induced pluripotent stem cells, and adult stem cells in healing wounds. Additionally, we will discuss the different angles whereby these cells can contribute to their unique features and show the current drawbacks.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic wounds; Cytokines; Growth factors; Skin; Stem cells; Wound healing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30922387 PMCID: PMC6440165 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-019-1212-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Stem cells used for in wound therapeutic
| Stem cells types | Delivery mode | Wound types | Correction efficiency | Model source use | Treatment effect notes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BM-SCs | Scratch wound assay | Wound closure | 3 days | Human | Stimulate fibroblasts, migration of keratinocyte and synthesis ECM proteins | [ |
| BM-SCs | Tail vein injection post-operatively | Ischemia flap | 7 days | Murine | Enhance angiogenesis and vascular regeneration | [ |
| autologous MSC | Fibrin spray system | Cutaneous wound | 12 weeks | Murine and human | Stimulate closure of full-thickness wounds in diabetic mice and wound healing repair | [ |
| Combination hMSC with bFGF | Cutaneous wound | 42 days | Rat | Increase re-epithelialization | [ | |
| Co-culture dermal fibroblasts with BM-SCs | Scratch wound assay | Wound closure | 3 days | Murine | Increase proliferation and migration of dermal fibroblasts | [ |
| MSCs | Subjection | Incision wound | 4 days | Mice | Enhance tissue regeneration capacity especially in older populations | [ |
| Autologous bone marrow | Aspiration | Chronic Wound | 5 weeks | Human | Rebuilding of dermal | [ |
| MSCs | Closed culture devices | Radiation burns | 5 months | Human | Modulation radiation inflammatory process | [ |
| Autologous MSCs | Injection | Diabetic ulcer | 4 weeks | Human | Successful healing | [ |
| Allogeneic BM-SCs | Intradermal | Excisional wound | 14 days | Murine | Accelerate wound closure, increase re-epithelialization and angiogenesis | [ |
| BM-SCs | Aspiration | Non-healing wound | 5 days | Human | Increase synthesis of collagen | [ |
| MSCs | Injection | Cutaneous wound | 2 weeks | Human | Promote angiogenesis | [ |
| MSCs | Mechanical loading | Incision wound | Mouse | Enhancement of angiogenesis | [ | |
| hUC-MSCs) | Transplantation | Burn | 8 weeks | Rat | Decrease inflammatory cells, increase neovascularization and enhance collagen level | [ |
| ASCs | Transplantation | Non-irradiated and irradiated | 14 days | Mouse | Promote dermal wound healing, enhance wound closure and collagen secretion | [ |
| hESCs | Grafting | Burn | Enhanced wound healing | Human-mice | hESC-derived epidermis showed a pluristratified structure, consistent with that of mature native human skin | [ |
| ESCs | Directly on a gauze | Chronic Wounds | Accelerated wound healing | Diabetic mice | The beneficial effects were evident both histopathologically and immunohistochemically | [ |
| Mouse-iPSCs | Grafting | Inherited skin disorders | Enhanced wound healing | Mouse | iPSC-KC stem cells were able to regenerate the epidermis, hair follicles, and sebaceous glands in an in vivo graft assay | [ |
| hiPSC-MSCs-Exos | Injected locally | Injured tissues | Facilitated cutaneous wound healing | Human-rat | Accelerated re-epithelialization, reduced scar widths, the promotion of collagen maturity, promoted the generation of newly formed vessels, accelerated their maturation in wound sites | [ |
| hiPSC | Grafting | Skin disease | Reconstitution of normal skin structures | Human-SCID mice | Skin appendages, such as hair follicles and glands, were not detected, and no cyst or tumor formation | [ |
| hiPSCs | Grafting | Inherited skin disorder | Reconstitute human skin | EB patient-SCID mice | The reconstituted skin expressed human Col17 at the basement membrane zone, human type VII collagen and human keratin 14 were expressed in the basal layer | [ |
Fig. 1The function of MSCs used in innate and adaptive immune systems
Fig. 2Biological function of MSCs in soluble factor secreted