| Literature DB >> 32290584 |
Katarzyna Stefańska1, Katarzyna Ożegowska2, Greg Hutchings3,4, Małgorzata Popis3, Lisa Moncrieff1,4, Claudia Dompe1,4, Krzysztof Janowicz3,4, Wojciech Pieńkowski5, Paweł Gutaj6, Jamil A Shibli7, Walterson Mathias Prado7, Hanna Piotrowska-Kempisty8, Paul Mozdziak9, Małgorzata Bruska3, Maciej Zabel10,11, Bartosz Kempisty1,3,12,13, Michał Nowicki1.
Abstract
Stem cell therapies offer a great promise for regenerative and reconstructive medicine, due to their self-renewal and differentiation capacity. Although embryonic stem cells are pluripotent, their utilization involves embryo destruction and is ethically controversial. Therefore, adult tissues that have emerged as an alternative source of stem cells and perinatal tissues, such as the umbilical cord, appear to be particularly attractive. Wharton's jelly, a gelatinous connective tissue contained in the umbilical cord, is abundant in mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) that express CD105, CD73, CD90, Oct-4, Sox-2, and Nanog among others, and have the ability to differentiate into osteogenic, adipogenic, chondrogenic, and other lineages. Moreover, Wharton's jelly-derived MSCs (WJ-MSCs) do not express MHC-II and exhibit immunomodulatory properties, which makes them a good alternative for allogeneic and xenogeneic transplantations in cellular therapies. Therefore, umbilical cord, especially Wharton's jelly, is a promising source of mesenchymal stem cells.Entities:
Keywords: Wharton’s jelly; stem cells; umbilical cord
Year: 2020 PMID: 32290584 PMCID: PMC7230974 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9041102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1The schematic cross section of human umbilical cord covered with the umbilical cord lining, with an outer layer of umbilical epithelium, and three umbilical vessels embedded in Wharton’s jelly. Both umbilical vein and umbilical arteries are devoid of tunica adventitia. Between the latter, the residual allantois is located. Wharton’s jelly is a gelatinous connective tissue composed of extracellular matrix abundant in glycosaminoglycans (mostly hyaluronic acid), collagen fibers and myofibroblasts, and occasional mast cells. Stromal cells of Wharton’s jelly are most abundant in the proximity of the umbilical vessels in perivascular Wharton’s jelly, becoming less abundant in intervascular Wharton’s jelly, with the least amount of stromal cells in subamniotic Wharton’s jelly. The degree of stromal cells’ differentiation towards myofibroblasts is the highest near the vessels, gradually decreasing towards the umbilical epithelium.
Figure 2Isolation of cells from Wharton’s jelly may be performed with the use of two different methods, namely, explant method or enzymatic digestion. In both cases, the umbilical epithelium and vessels are initially removed, while the residual tissue is mechanically fragmented. The tissue pieces are placed directly on the culture vessel in the explant method, which results in the cell outgrowth on the plastic surface. In the enzymatic method, the tissue pieces are first digested in the enzymatic solution, and after that the cells released from the tissue are centrifuged, suspended in the culture medium, and seeded in the culture vessels.
Figure 3Stromal cells from Wharton’s jelly have a broad differentiation capacity and are able to transform into cells of all three primary germ layers: endoderm, ectoderm, and mesoderm. The endodermal lineages obtained from WJ-MSCs include hepatocytes or pancreatic islet-like cells. Differentiation of WJ-MSCs towards mesodermal lineages resulted in obtaining cells such as osteoblasts, chondroblasts, adipocytes, cardiomyocytes, skeletal muscle cells, or endothelial cells. Transformation of WJ-MSCs into neurons, which are of ectodermal origin, has also been achieved.
Animal studies with the use of stem cells from human umbilical cords.
| Treated Condition | Animal Model | Mean Dose of Stem Cells in One Injection | Source of MSCs | Delivery Method | Author | Publication Date | Journal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parkinson’s disease | Hemiparkinsonian Sprague-Dawley rats | 1 × 103 | Wharton’s jelly | Intrastriatal injection | Weiss et al. [ | 2006 |
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| Parkinsonian Sprague-Dawley rats | 1 × 105 | Wharton’s jelly | Intrastriatal injection | Fu et al. [ | 2006 |
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| Spinal cord injury | Wistar rats with spinal cord injury | 0.5 or 1.5 × 106 | Wharton’s jelly | Intrathecal infusion | Krupa et al. [ | 2018 |
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| Wistar rats with spinal cord injury | 1.5 × 106 | Wharton’s jelly | Intrathecal infusion | Chudickova et al. [ | 2019 |
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| Wistar rats with spinal cord injury | 3 × 105 | Wharton’s jelly | Intrathecal infusion | Mohamadi et al. [ | 2019 |
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| Hindlimb ischemia | Athymic nude mice with hindlimb ischemia | 1 × 106 | Umbilical cord (not specified) | Injection to the adductor muscle | Wu et al. [ | 2007 |
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| Brain ischemia | Sprague-Dawley rats with brain ischemia | 1 × 106 | Wharton’s jelly | Intracerebral injection | Ding et al. [ | 2007 |
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| Diabetes | Streptozotocin-induced diabetic Balb/C mice | 3 × 106 of undifferentiated cells or 1 × 103 islet-like clusters | Umbilical cord (not specified) | Transplantation of encapsulated cells into abdomen | Kadam et al. [ | 2010 |
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| Pulmonary fibrosis | Bleomycin-induced lung injury in SCID mice | 1 × 106 | Wharton’s jelly | Intravenous injection | Moodley et al. [ | 2009 |
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| Liver fibrosis | Sprague-Dawley rats with CCl4-induced liver fibrosis | 5 × 105 | Wharton’s jelly | Injection into the right lobe of the liver | Tsai et al. [ | 2009 |
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| Skin injury | SCID mice with skin injury | 1 × 106 | Wharton’s jelly | Injection into the skin or | Sabapathy et al. [ | 2014 |
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| Myocardial infarction | Guangxi Bama miniswines with acute myocardial infarction | 4 × 107 | Wharton’s jelly | Injection into the ischemic region of the heart | Zhang et al. [ | 2013 |
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| C57BL/6 mice with myocardial infarction | 2 × 105 | Umbilical cord (not specified) | Intramyocardial injection | Nascimento et al. [ | 2014 |
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| Cancer | CB17 SCID mice with bronchioloalveolar carcinoma | 3 × 105 | Wharton’s jelly | Intravenous injection | Matsuzuka et al. [ | 2010 |
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| CB17 SCID mice transplanted with MDA 231 human breast carcinoma cells | 5 × 105 | Wharton’s jelly | Intravenous injection | Ayuzawa et al. [ | 2009 |
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| CB17 SCID mice transplanted with MDA 231 human breast carcinoma cells | 0.5 × 106 or1 × 106 or 3 × 106 | Wharton’s jelly | Subcutaneous injection at the tumor site | Ma et al. [ | 2012 |
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Clinical trials with the use of stem cells from human umbilical cords.
| Treated Condition | Number of Study Participants | Type of Study | Source of Stem Cells/Number of Donors | Mean Dose of Stem Cells in One Injection | Delivery Method | Author | Publication Date | Journal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute myocardial infarction | 116 | Randomized double-blind controlled trial | Wharton’s jelly/pooled from 21 donors | 6 × 106 | Intracoronary infusion | Gao et al. [ | 2015 |
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| Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | 43 | Not specified | Wharton’s jelly/pooled from three donors | 0.42 × 106/kg of body weight | Intrathecal injection | Barczewska et al. [ | 2019 |
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| HIV-1-infected immune nonresponders | 13 | Prospective open-labeled controlled trial | Wharton’s jelly/not specified | 0.5 × 106/kg of body weight | Intravenous infusion | Zhang et al. [ | 2013 |
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| Active and refractory systemic lupus erythematosus | 40 | Multicenter trial | Umbilical cord (not specified)/not specified | 1 × 106/kg of body weight | Intravenous infusion | Wang et al. | 2014; |
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| Neuromyelitis optica | 5 | Not specified | Umbilical cord (not specified)/not specified | 4 × 107 or 2 × 107 | Intravenous and intrathecal infusion | Lu et al. [ | 2012 |
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| Rheumatoid arthritis | 172 | Single center trial | Umbilical cord (not specified)/not specified | 4 × 107 | Intravenous infusion | Wang et al. [ | 2013 |
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| Type 1 diabetes mellitus | 29 | Randomized double-blind controlled trial | Wharton’s jelly/one donor | 2.6 ± 1.2 × 107 | Intravenous infusion | Hu et al. [ | 2013 |
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| Type 2 diabetes mellitus | 22 | Single center prospective trial | Wharton’s jelly/not specified | 1 × 106/kg of body weight | Intravenous infusion and intra-pancreatic endovascular injection | Liu et al. [ | 2014 |
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| Autism | 37 | Non-randomized open-label, single center trial | Wharton’s jelly/not specified | 1 × 106/kg of body weight | Intravenous and intrathecal infusion | Lv et al. [ | 2013 |
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| High risk leukemia | 20 | Randomized trial | Wharton’s jelly/not specified | 1 × 106/kg of body weight | Intravenous infusion | Wu et al. [ | 2013 |
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