| Literature DB >> 33807314 |
Courtney Davis1, Sean I Savitz1, Nikunj Satani1.
Abstract
Ischemic stroke is a debilitating disease and one of the leading causes of long-term disability. During the early phase after ischemic stroke, the blood-brain barrier (BBB) exhibits increased permeability and disruption, leading to an influx of immune cells and inflammatory molecules that exacerbate the damage to the brain tissue. Mesenchymal stem cells have been investigated as a promising therapy to improve the recovery after ischemic stroke. The therapeutic effects imparted by MSCs are mostly paracrine. Recently, the role of extracellular vesicles released by these MSCs have been studied as possible carriers of information to the brain. This review focuses on the potential of MSC derived EVs to repair the components of the neurovascular unit (NVU) controlling the BBB, in order to promote overall recovery from stroke. Here, we review the techniques for increasing the effectiveness of MSC-based therapeutics, such as improved homing capabilities, bioengineering protein expression, modified culture conditions, and customizing the contents of EVs. Combining multiple techniques targeting NVU repair may provide the basis for improved future stroke treatment paradigms.Entities:
Keywords: bioengineering; blood-brain barrier; cell therapy; hypoxia; ischemic stroke; personalized treatment; preconditioning; secretome
Year: 2021 PMID: 33807314 PMCID: PMC8065444 DOI: 10.3390/cells10040767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Subtypes and Properties of Extracellular Vesicles.
| Exosomes | Microvesicles | Apoptotic Bodies | Oncosomes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alternative Names | Small EVs | Ectosomes, Shedding vesicles, Microparticles, Exovesicles | Large Oncosomes | |
| Intracellular Origin | Multivesicular Endosome | Plasma Membrane | Membrane blebbing during cell death | Non-apoptotic tumor-cell membrane blebbing |
| Size | 50–150 nm | 150–1000 nm | 100 nm–5 um | 1 um–10 um |
| Differential Ultracentrifugation | 100,000× | 10,000× | 800× | Alternate 8000× |
| Enriched Protein Pathways | Extracellular matrix; Heparin-binding; receptors; Immune response; Cell adhesion | Endoplasmic reticulum; Proteasome; Mitochondria | Heterogeneous | Extracellular matrix degradation; Angiogenesis; Cancer metabolism |
| Enriched Lipid Contents | Glycolipids, Free fatty acids, Phosphatidylserines | Ceramides and Sphingomyelins | ||
| Structural Plasma Membrane Lipids | Phosphatidylserine enrichment; Phosphatidylcholine, Phosphatidylglycerol, Phosphatidylinositol, and Phosphatidylethanolamine depletions | Dependent upon cellular origin; Most have phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylinositol, and phosphatidylethanolamine depletions | Phosphatidylserine enrichment | Phospholipid and phosphatidylserine enrichment |
| Contents | Proteins, Lipids, RNAs | Organelles, Proteins, Lipids, RNAs | Organelles, Histones, DNAs, RNAs, Nuclear fractions | Proteins, RNAs |
Figure 1Molecular effects of MSC-EVs on various cells in the neurovascular unit (NVU) in stroke. MSC-EVs and its contents affect diverse molecular pathways in endothelial cells, microglia, astrocytes, neurons and pericytes. They regulate various processes such as angiogenesis, tight junction integrity, pericyte migration, neurite outgrowth, neurogenesis, and microgial polarization. These complex interactions between different cell types determine the neurological outcome after stroke. Dotted lines indicate inhibition, while solid lines indicate potentiation.
In Vitro and In Vivo Effects of Hypoxia-preconditioned MSCs in Stroke Recovery.
| Condition | Cell Type | Secretome Changes | In Vitro Effects | In Vivo Effects | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypoxia | Rat BMSC | Increased HIF-1a, VEGF, FIK-1 SDF-1, CXCR4, BDNF, GDNF, EPO, EPOR, Angiotensin-1; Decreased Complement C3 and C5, IL-1α, L tb, Tnfrsf1a, Tnfrsf1b | - | Higher vessel density in ischemic core and penumbra; Stronger inhibition of OX-42+ microglia; Increased NeuN+ cells; Significant increase in motor function recovery; | [ |
| Stroke Serum | Rat BMSC | Increased miR-20a | Enhanced MSC proliferation | - | [ |
| Hypoxia (CoCl2) | Human MSC | Increased miR-124a, HIF-1α, DCX, Tuj1, | Increased neuronal differentiation | - | [ |
| Ischemic Brain extract | Human MSC | Increased BDNF, VEGF, and HGF | - | - | [ |
| Hypoxia | Rat BMSC | - | - | Reduced infarct volume; Decreased extravascular leakage; Increased angiogenesis and improved blood flow; Decreased behavioral deficits; | [ |
| MCAO Rat Brain Extract | Rat AD-MSC | Increased miR-212, miR-181b; | Increased OGD-BMEC migration and angiogenesis; Increased BMEC expression of HIF-1α, VEGF; Decreased BMEC expression of TIMP-3 | - | [ |
| Hypoxia | hUCB-MSC | Increased Thrombospondin1, Pantraxin3, VEGF | - | - | [ |
| Hypoxia | Rat BMSC | - | - | Increased migration of MSCs to infarct region possibly due to upregulation of CXCR4, MMP-2, and MMP-9; Reduced brain infarct volume and cell death; Attenuated neurological deficits; | [ |
| Hypoxia | hUCB-MSC | Increased VEGF, Angiogenin, IGF, IL-6, Tie-2/TEK, UPAR | - | - | [ |
| Hypoxia | Rat BMSC | - | Increased proliferation and migration possibly due to activation of PI3K/AKT pathway | Reduced cerebral inflammation and edema; Increased reduction of TNFα and S100B; | [ |
| Hypoxia | Aged human BMSC | Increased VEGF | Increased viability of OGD neurons | - | [ |