| Literature DB >> 31671788 |
Heba Abdelrazik1,2, Emanuele Giordano3, Giovanni Barbanti Brodano4, Cristiana Griffoni5, Elena De Falco6,7, Alessandra Pelagalli8,9.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) have piqued worldwide interest for their extensive potential to treat a large array of clinical indications, their unique and controversial immunogenic and immune modulatory properties allowing ample discussions and debates for their possible applications. Emerging data demonstrating that the interaction of biomaterials and physical cues with MSC can guide their differentiation into specific cell lineages also provide new interesting insights for further MSC manipulation in different clinical applications. Moreover, recent discoveries of some regulatory molecules and signaling pathways in MSC niche that may regulate cell fate to distinct lineage herald breakthroughs in regenerative medicine. Although the advancement and success in the MSC field had led to an enormous increase in the amount of ongoing clinical trials, we still lack defined clinical therapeutic protocols. This review will explore the exciting opportunities offered by human and animal MSC, describing relevant biological properties of these cells in the light of the novel emerging evidence mentioned above while addressing the limitations and challenges MSC are still facing.Entities:
Keywords: 3D scaffolds; angiogenesis; biomaterials; bone regeneration; immune modulation; mesenchymal stem cells (MSC); translational medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31671788 PMCID: PMC6862078 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20215386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Growth factors and their influence on biological activities of MSC from animal species.
| Animal Species | MSC Origin | Growth Factor | Role | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dog | Bone marrow | PDGF and bFGF | Growth factor and proliferation | [ |
| Adipose tissue | PRGF, FGF-2 | Proliferation and chondrogenesis | [ | |
| Horse | Bone marrow | IGF-1 | Cell proliferation and collagen and GAG synthesis | [ |
| Adipose tissue | TGFβ3 | Tenogenic differentiation of equine MSC | [ | |
| Pig | Bone marrow | VEGF | Angiogenesis | [ |
| Sheep | Bone marrow | EGF + bFGF + TGFβ | Proliferation, migration and invasion | [ |
Preclinical studies of animal-derived MSC as possible therapeutic potentials.
| Animal | N. Subjects | MSC Type | Disease | Treatment | Effects | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cat | 1 | Spinal | Spinal cord injury | Autologous MSC (7 × 108) + collagen | Significant functional clinical improvement; long melioration | [ |
| 6 | AdMSC | Chronic kidney | Allogenic MSC (2 × 106 cells; 2–6 weeks) | Long term melioration | [ | |
| Dog | 130 | Micro fragmented AdMSC | Osteoarthritis | Intra-articular injection | Long-term pain control | [ |
| Horse | 10 | BM | Cartilage defects | Intra-articular injection (2 × 106 cells) | Increase in repair tissue firmness | [ |
| 33 | BM | Femorotibial lesions (meniscal, cartilage or ligamentous) | Intra-articular injection (1.5 × 107–2.0 × 107 cells) | Improvement | [ | |
| Pig | 1 | BM | Model of intervertebral degeneration | Autologous (1 × 106 cells/mL) | Reduction of degenerative process | [ |
| 8 | AdMSC | Esophagus | Cells implanted on scaffold | Regrowth of esophageal tissue | [ | |
| 2 | BM | Cutaneous wound healing | Autologous MSC (1.5 × 107 cells) injected intradermally | Regeneration | [ | |
| Sheep | 10 | BM | Osteoarthritis | Autologous MSC injected intra-articular | Improvement of articular cartilage | [ |
| 6 | PB-MSCs | Cutaneous wound healing | Injection (1 × 106 cells) intradermally | Skin re-epithelialization | [ | |
| 1 | AdMSC and BM | Osteoarthritis | Autologous chondrogenic induced Ad and BM cells | Improvement of articular cartilage within 6 weeks post-treatment | [ |
Figure 1MSCs derived from vertebral bone marrow aspiration: culture of whole BMA or isolation of MSCs from density-gradient centrifugation. Red arrows indicate the two different processes to obtain MSCs from vertebral bone marrow aspirate (BMA): on the left, MSCs derived from whole BMA are cultured in hypoxic conditions; on the right, MSCs are isolated from BMA by Ficoll density-gradient centrifugation and they are cultured in hypoxic conditions. Blue arrows indicate the passages to obtain isolation of MSCs from BMA by Ficoll density-gradient.