| Literature DB >> 31918755 |
Khawaja Husnain Haider1,2, Beatrice Aramini3.
Abstract
Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have successfully progressed to phase III clinical trials successive to an intensive in vitro and pre-clinical assessment in experimental animal models of ischemic myocardial injury. With scanty evidence regarding their cardiogenic differentiation in the recipient patients' hearts post-engraftment, paracrine secretion of bioactive molecules is being accepted as the most probable underlying mechanism to interpret the beneficial effects of cell therapy. Secretion of small non-coding microRNA (miR) constitutes an integral part of the paracrine activity of stem cells, and there is emerging interest in miRs' delivery to the heart as part of cell-free therapy to exploit their integral role in various cellular processes. MSCs also release membrane vesicles of diverse sizes loaded with a wide array of miRs as part of their paracrine secretions primarily for intercellular communication and to shuttle genetic material. Exosomes can also be loaded with miRs of interest for delivery to the organs of interest including the heart, and hence, exosome-based cell-free therapy is being assessed for cell-free therapy as an alternative to cell-based therapy. This review of literature provides an update on cell-free therapy with primary focus on exosomes derived from BM-derived MSCs for myocardial repair.Entities:
Keywords: Bone marrow; Exosomes; MSCs, myocardial, paracrine; Mesenchymal; Microvesicles
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31918755 PMCID: PMC6953131 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-019-1548-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1A head-to-head comparison of cell therapy and cell-free therapy
Fig. 2Summary of the role of bone marrow MSC-derived exosomes and miRs in cell-free therapy
Exosomal miRs released from various cell types [134, 135]
| Cell type | Exosomal miRs released |
|---|---|
| Endothelial cells | miR-10, miR-143/145, miR-214, miR-342-5p |
| Smooth muscle cells | miR-155, miR-221/222 |
| Cardiomyocytes | miR-30a, miR-320 |
| Cardiac fibroblasts | miR-27a, miR-28a, 34a |