| Literature DB >> 32873307 |
Celia Sid-Otmane1,2, Louis P Perrault1,2,3, Hung Q Ly4,5,6.
Abstract
In the past decade, despite key advances in therapeutic strategies following myocardial infarction, none can directly address the loss of cardiomyocytes following ischemic injury. Cardiac cell-based therapy is at the cornerstone of regenerative medicine that has shown potential for tissue repair. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) represent a strong candidate to heal the infarcted myocardium. While differentiation potential has been described as a possible avenue for MSC-based repair, their secreted mediators are responsible for the majority of the ascribed prohealing effects. MSC can either promote their own survival and proliferation through autocrine effect or secrete trophic factors that will act on adjacent cells through a paracrine effect. Prior studies have also documented beneficial effects even when MSCs were remotely delivered, much akin to an endocrine mechanism. This review aims to distinguish the paracrine activity of MSCs from an endocrine-like effect, where remotely transplanted cells can promote healing of the injured myocardium.Entities:
Keywords: Autocrine; Endocrine; Mesenchymal stem cells; Paracrine; Remote delivery
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32873307 PMCID: PMC7466793 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-020-02504-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Cardiac healing and repair mediated by direct and indirect mechanisms in cardiac cell therapy
Clinical benefits from key clinical trials using stromal stem cells in heart diseases
| Clinical trial | Year | Cell type | Patient population | Delivery route | LVEF | LVEDV | Infarct size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| POSEIDON [ | 2012 | Allogeneic and autologous BM-MSC | ICM LVEF ≤ 50% | Transendocardial | ↑ | ↓ | ↓ |
| APOLLO [ | 2012 | Autologous ASC | STEMI | Intracoronary | ↔ | N/A | ↓ |
| C-CURE [ | 2013 | Autologous BM-MSC | LVEF 15–40% | Endoventricular | ↑ | ↓ | N/A |
| PROMETHEUS [ | 2014 | Autologous BM-MSC | ICM | Intramyocardial | ↑ | ↓ | ↓ |
| PRECISE [ | 2014 | Autologous ASC | ICM, CABG | Transendocardial | ↔ | ↔ | ↔ |
| Gao et al. [ | 2015 | Allogeneic WJ-MSC | STEMI | Intracoronary | ↑ | ↓ | N/A |
| TRIDENT [ | 2017 | Allogeneic BM-MSC | ICM, LVEF ≤ 50% | Transendocardial | ↔ | ↔ | ↓ |
| CHART-1 [ | 2017 | Autologous BM-MSC | IHF, LVEF ≤ 35% | Intramyocardial | ↔ | ↔ | N/A |
| ATHENA [ | 2017 | Autologous ASC | ICM 20% ≤ LVEF ≤ 45% | Intramyocardial | ↔ | ↔ | N/A |
| MyStromalCell [ | 2017 | Autologous ASC | ICM LVEF > 40% | Intramyocardial | N/A | N/A | N/A |
↔↑↓ Respectively mean no change, increase and decrease. N/A means not measured
BM Bone marrow, WJ Wharton Jelly, ICM ischemic cardiomyopathy, CABG Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting, LVEF Left Ventricular. Ejection Fraction, LVEDV Left Ventricular End-Diastolic Volume, ICM Ischemic Cardiomyopathy, STEMI ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction
Fig. 2Repair pathways related to MSC-mediated therapeutic effects following ischemic injury. Autocrine pathways are involved in proliferation, survival and possible differentiation of MSCs. Paracrine pathways are elicited by secreted mediators that act in the vicinity of MSCs to promote angiogenesis, inhibit fibrosis and activate endogenous progenitor cells. Finally, endocrine-like pathways are induced when MSC (once remotely transplanted) are activated by distant injury and secreted trophic factors that circulate either in the vascular or lymphatic systems to induce pro-healing effects related to both autocrine and paracrine pathways