| Literature DB >> 31191671 |
Maria P de Miguel1, I Prieto2, A Moratilla1, J Arias3, M A Aller3.
Abstract
The liver centralizes the systemic metabolism and thus controls and modulates the functions of the central and peripheral nervous systems, the immune system, and the endocrine system. In addition, the liver intervenes between the splanchnic and systemic venous circulation, determining an abdominal portal circulatory system. The liver displays a powerful regenerative potential that rebuilds the parenchyma after an injury. This regenerative mission is mainly carried out by resident liver cells. However, in many cases this regenerative capacity is insufficient and organ failure occurs. In normal livers, if the size of the liver is at least 30% of the original volume, hepatectomy can be performed safely. In cirrhotic livers, the threshold is 50% based on current practice and available data. Typically, portal vein embolization of the part of the liver that is going to be resected is employed to allow liver regeneration in two-stage liver resection after portal vein occlusion (PVO). However, hepatic resection often cannot be performed due to advanced disease progression or because it is not indicated in patients with cirrhosis. In such cases, liver transplantation is the only treatment possibility, and the need for transplantation is the common outcome of progressive liver disease. It is the only effective treatment and has high survival rates of 83% after the first year. However, donated organs are becoming less available, and mortality and the waiting lists have increased, leading to the initiation of living donor liver transplantations. This type of transplant has overall complications of 38%. In order to improve the treatment of hepatic injury, much research has been devoted to stem cells, in particular mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), to promote liver regeneration. In this review, we will focus on the advances made using MSCs in animal models, human patients, ongoing clinical trials, and new strategies using 3D organoids.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31191671 PMCID: PMC6525815 DOI: 10.1155/2019/3945672
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Histological images of a normal rat (a) and long-term cholestatic (b) liver parenchyma. Note the severe epithelial bile cell proliferation associated with fibrosis and hepatocyte death by necrosis and apoptosis in (b). V: portal vein, A: hepatic artery, B: biliary duct, and H: hepatocytes.
Figure 2In the liver, the ductular reactions (bottom) could adopt ductal plate configurations (superior). In addition, the normal hepatic structure, represented by a functional hepatic unit (middle), is also based on the ductal plate configuration.
Figure 3Mesenchymal stem cells in culture under phase-contrast microcopy. (a) Bone marrow-derived MSC. (b) Adipose tissue-derived MSC. Original magnification 200x.
Differences in cell membrane CD expression and differentiation capacity between BM-MSC and AD-MSC. Data from [60–62].
| Surface markers | Differentiation capacity | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AD-MSC | BM-MSC | AD-MSC | BM-MSC | ||
| CD9 | + | + |
| ||
| CD10 | + | + | PPAR | High | High |
| CD11b | + | + | LPL | High | High |
| CD13 | + | + |
| ||
| CD29 | + | + | Osterix | Low | High |
| CD34 | Unstable | − | Alk phosphatase | High | High |
| CD44 | + | + | Osteocalcin | Low | High |
| CD45 | − | − |
| ||
| CD49d | + | − | Type II collagen | High | Low |
| CD54 | + | Unstable | Aggrecan | Low | High |
| CD55 | + | + | Type X collagen | High | Low |
| CD58 | + | + |
| ||
| CD71 | + | + | Insulin | Positive | ND |
| CD73 | + | + |
| ||
| CD90 | + | + | Sarcomeric actin | Positive | ND |
| CD91 | + | + | GATA4 | Positive | ND |
| CD105 | + | + |
| ||
| CD106 | + | + | Albumin | Positive | ND |
| CD140 | − | + | |||
| CD146 | + | + | |||
| CD166 | − | + | |||
Summary of clinical trials with MSC for liver failure.
| Trial PI | Number of patients | Cell type | Cell number | Administration route | Disease |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kharaziha et al. [ | 8 | BM-MSCs | 3 × 107 to 5 × 107 | Portal vein | Chronic liver failure |
| Amer et al. [ | 40 | BM-MSCs | 2 × 107 cells | Intrasplenic vs. intrahepatic | End-stage liver failure |
| Kantarcıoğlu et al. [ | 12 | BM-MSCs | 1 × 106 cells/kg | Peripheral vein | Liver cirrhosis |
| Suk et al. [ | 55 | BM-MSCs | 5 × 107 | Hepatic artery | Liver cirrhosis |
| El-Ansary et al. [ | 12 | BM-MSCs | 1 × 106 cells | Intrasplenic vs. peripheral vein | Chronic liver failure |
| Peng et al. [ | 23 | BM-MSCs | 1 × 107 cells | Hepatic artery | Liver failure |
| Mohamadnejad et al. [ | 25 | BM-MSCs | 1.95 × 108 cells | Peripheral vein | Decompensated liver cirrhosis |
| Zhang et al. [ | 46 | UC-MSCs | 0.5 × 106/kg | Peripheral vein | Decompensated liver cirrhosis |
| Yu et al. [ | 35 | BM-MSCs | 5 × 106 cells | Peripheral vein | End-stage liver failure |
| Zhang et al. [ | 30 | UC-MSCs | ≥2 × 107 cells | Hepatic artery | Decompensated liver cirrhosis |
| Liu et al. [ | 35 | UC-MSCs | >5 × 107 cells | Peripheral vein vs. hepatic artery | Acute-on-chronic liver failure |
| Sakai et al. [ | 4 | AD-MSCs | 3.3 × 105 to 6.6 × 105 cells/kg | Hepatic artery | Liver cirrhosis |