| Literature DB >> 31248452 |
Xiaoting Li1, Teng Ma2, Jiacheng Sun2, Mingjing Shen3, Xiang Xue3, Yongbing Chen4, Zhiwei Zhang5.
Abstract
Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) are promising therapeutic cells for ischemic heart diseases, due to the ease and efficiency of acquisition, the potential of myocardial lineage differentiation, and the paracrine effects. Recently, many researchers have claimed that the ASC-based myocardial repair is mainly attributed to its paracrine effects, including the anti-apoptosis, pro-angiogenesis, anti-inflammation effects, and the inhibition of fibrosis, rather than the direct differentiation into cardiovascular lineage cells. However, the usage of ASCs comes with the problems of low cardiac retention and survival after transplantation, like other stem cells, which compromises the effectiveness of the therapy. To overcome these drawbacks, researchers have proposed various strategies for improving survival rate and ensuring sustained paracrine secretion. They also investigated the safety and efficacy of phase I and II clinical trials of ASC-based therapy for cardiovascular diseases. In this review, we will discuss the characterization and paracrine effects of ASCs on myocardial repair, followed by the strategies for stimulating the paracrine secretion of ASCs, and finally their clinical usage.Entities:
Keywords: Adipose-derived stem cells; Ischemic heart diseases; Myocardial repair; Paracrine effects; Secretome; Strategies
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31248452 PMCID: PMC6598280 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-019-1289-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Functions of the ASC secretome on the ischemic heart. Lots of trophic factors released by ASCs, such as VEGF, HGF, PGF, TGF-β, FGF-2, Ang-1, and Ang-2, IGF-1, and microvesicles, miR-31 and miR-126, benefit for proangiogenesis in the ischemic myocardium. The ASC secretome may have the ability to modulate the release of inflammatory cytokines, such as INF-γ, IDO, NO, IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, IL-11, and TNF-α. ASC-secreted factors such as IGF-1, VEGF, exosomes, and miR-301a may improve the capacity of cardiomyocyte survival in hypoxic conditions. Meanwhile, ASCs may secrete molecules such as VEGF, HGF, MCP-1, TIMP-1, and TIMP-4 that contribute to inhibiting fibrosis and cardiac remodeling. Maybe certain paracrine factors such as SDF-1, VEGF, FGF-2, HGF, CXCL-12, and microvesicles released by ASCs could recruit endogenous stem cells and enable cardiovacular lineage cells re-enter cell cycling. In addition, ASC-conditioned medium could induce conduction slowing of neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs), probably attributed to the secondary autocrine myocardial factors released by NRVM
Fig. 2Paracrine effects of the ASC secretome and involved pathways. ASCs secrete IGF-1, SOD-3, miRNA-301a, and exosomes for improving the effect of anti-apoptosis or pro-survival through regulating cell cycle, N-Cadherin/ERK/Nrf2, ASK-1 and NFγB/p38/JNK, Wnt/β-Catenin, cyclin D1, Bcl-2 and Bax, respectively. ASC-derived microvesicles perform the pro-angiogenesis effect via delivery of miRNA-126 and miRNA-31 through ERK1/2/MAPK and FIH-1 pathways, respectively. The conditioned medium of ASCs exerts the anti-inflammation effect through IFN-γ/IDO and PGE2/EP2/4 signaling pathways, which also can recruit circulating EPCs through CXCL12/SDF-1α pathway. The anti-cardiac remodeling effect is mediated by exosomes through MAPK/PI3K pathway and HGF released from ASCs
Fig. 3Strategies for stimulating ASC paracrine secretion are summarized. Genetic modification and protein molecular, pharmacological, physiological, and physical preconditioning have been employed to stimulate the release of the customized ASC secretome. Furthermore, bioengineering strategies, such as 3D cell culture combined with SAPs, ASC-seeded scaffolds, microspheres capsula, thermosensitive chitosan/gelatin hydrogel, and cell sheet, can efficiently control and maintain the release of ASC secretome through several smart biomaterials
Completed and ongoing ASC-based clinical trials for cardiovascular diseases
| Clinical trial ID | Phase | Pathologies | Enrolled number | Cell delivery route | Outcome measures | Status | Study designs | Cell quantity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00442806 [ | 1 | STEMI | 14 | Intracoronary injection | Safety, MACCE, feasibility, cardiac function | Completed | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | 20–40 × 106 cells |
| NCT02673164 | 2 | Heart failure | 138 | Direct intra-myocardial injection | LVESV, safety | Recruiting | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | 100 × 106 cells |
| NCT01449032 [ | 2 | Chronic ischemic heart disease | 60 | Direct intra-myocardial injection | Exercise test, clinical evaluation | Completed | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | 72.0 ± 44.9 × 106 cells |
| NCT02387723 | 1 | Heart failure | 10 | Direct intra-myocardial injection | Safety, LVESV, LVEF, LVEDV (ml), LV end-systolic mass (g) | Completed | Single group assignment, open-label | 100 × 106 cells |
| NCT00426868 [ | 1 | Ischemic heart disease | 27 | Direct intra-myocardial injection | Safety, MACCE, feasibility, cardiac function | Completed | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | 0.4–1.2 × 106 cells/kg |
| NCT03092284 | 2 | Heart failure | 81 | Direct intra-myocardial injection | LVESV, safety, LVEF, KCCQ, 6 min walking test, Seattle Angina Questionnaire | Recruiting | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | 100 × 106 cells |
| NCT02052427 [ | 2 | Chronic myocardial Ischemia | 3 | Direct intra-myocardial injection | MLHFQ, mVO2, LVESV/LVEDV, EF, perfusion defect, NYHA classification, CCS classification | Completed | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | 0.8 × 106 cells/kg |
| NCT01216995 | 2 | STEMI | 23 | Intracoronary injection | Infarct size, MACCE rates | Completed | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | Not yet open |
| NCT01556022 [ | 2 | Chronic ischemic heart disease | 28 | Direct intra-myocardial injection | Safety, SAEs, MACE, arrhythmia assessment, feasibility, cardiac function, LVESV/LVEDV, EF | Completed | Randomized, parallel assignment, double-blind | 0.4 × 106 cells/kg |
| NCT01709279 | Not applicable | Ischemic heart failure | 6 | Intracoronary injection | All-cause harmful events | Enrolling by invitation | Single group assignment, open-label, | Not yet open |
STEMI ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction, LVESV left ventricle end-systolic volume, LVEDV left ventricle end-diastolic volume, MACCE major adverse cardiac and cerebral events, KCCQ Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire, MLHFQ Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire, NYHA New York Heart Function Assessment, CCS Canadian Cardiovascular Society, SAEs serious adverse events, MACE major adverse cardiac events