| Literature DB >> 33898449 |
Marina O Gomzikova1,2, Victoria James3, Albert A Rizvanov1,2,3.
Abstract
The phenomenon of mitochondria donation is found in various tissues of humans and animals and is attracting increasing attention. To date, numerous studies have described the transfer of mitochondria from stem cells to injured cells, leading to increased ATP production, restoration of mitochondria function, and rescue of recipient cells from apoptosis. Mitochondria transplantation is considered as a novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of mitochondrial diseases and mitochondrial function deficiency. Mitochondrial dysfunction affects cells with high energy needs such as neural, skeletal muscle, heart, and liver cells and plays a crucial role in type 2 diabetes, as well as Parkinson's, Alzheimer's diseases, ischemia, stroke, cancer, and age-related disorders. In this review, we summarize recent findings in the field of mitochondria donation and mechanism of mitochondria transfer between cells. We review the existing clinical trials and discuss advantages and disadvantages of mitochondrial transplantation strategies based on the injection of stem cells, isolated functional mitochondria, or EVs containing mitochondria.Entities:
Keywords: cell fusion; extracellular vesicles; isolated mitochondria; mitochondria donation; mitochondria transplantation; tunneling nanotubes
Year: 2021 PMID: 33898449 PMCID: PMC8058353 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.653322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1The cell-based (A) and cell-free (B) strategies of mitochondria delivery into recipient cells. A (I)—mitochondria transfer through TNTs, A (II)—mitochondria exchange after cell fusion, B (I)—injection of isolated mitochondria, B (II)—application of peptide conjugated mitochondria, B (III)—delivery of mitochondria encapsulated into EVs.
Studies demonstrating TNT-mediated mitochondria transfer.
| Donor cell | Recipient cell | Conditions | References |
| Human endothelial progenitor cells | Rat cardiomyoctes | Normal conditions, | |
| Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) | Rat cardiomyocytes | Normal conditions, | |
| Mesenchymal multipotent stromal cells | Renal tubular cells | Normal conditions, | |
| Mouse endothelial progenitor cells | Stressed human endothelial cells | (1) Exposure to glycated collagen I | |
| Mouse bone marrow-derived stromal cells (mBMSCs) | Alveolar epithelium | Sepsis model of acute lung injury | |
| MSCs and endothelial cells | Cancer cells (MCF7, MDA, OVCAR3, SKOV3) | Normal conditions, | |
| Human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived MSCs | Bronchial epithelial cells (BEAS-2B) | (1) Injury induced by cigarette smoke medium | |
| MSCs | Bronchial epithelial cells | (1) Mitochondrial dysfunction induced by pro-inflammatory supernatant | |
| MSCs | Human umbilical vein endothelial cells | Ischemia–reperfusion model | |
| Mesenchymal multipotent stromal cells | Rat neural cells | (1) Normal conditions, | |
| MSCs and iPSC-MSCs | Mouse cardiomyocytes | (1) Doxorubicin-induced Injury | |
| hMSCs | Human lung epithelial cells (BEAS2B) | Normal conditions, | |
| MSC | Lung macrophages | (1) Normal conditions, | |
| MSCs | Corneal epithelial cells | Rotenone-induced oxidative stress | |
| BM-MSCs | H9c2 cardiomyocytes | Ischemia/reperfusion injury | |
| Bone marrow stromal cells | Acute myeloid leukemia blasts | Normal conditions, | |
| hMSC | hMSCs | H2O2 induced oxidative stress | |
| Wharton’s jelly MSCs | Mitochondria-deficient cells (mutation in mitochondrial DNA) | Cells from patient with MERRF syndrome, | |
| MSCs | T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells | Normal conditions, | |
| iPSC-MSCs | Human BEAS-2B bronchial epithelium | (1) CoCl2-induced mitochondrial dysfunction | |
| Human iPSC-MSCs | Rat neuroendocrine PC12 cells | CoCl2-induced cell damage |