| Literature DB >> 34359631 |
Federico Villa1, Silvia Bruno2, Ambra Costa2, Mingchuan Li3, Michele Russo3, James Cimino3, Paola Altieri4, Clarissa Ruggeri4, Cansu Gorgun1,2, Pierangela De Biasio5, Dario Paladini6, Domenico Coviello7, Rodolfo Quarto1,2, Pietro Ameri4,8, Alessandra Ghigo3, Silvia Ravera2, Roberta Tasso1,2, Sveva Bollini2.
Abstract
Cardiovascular side effects are major shortcomings of cancer treatments causing cardiotoxicity and late-onset cardiomyopathy. While doxorubicin (Dox) has been reported as an effective chemotherapy agent, unspecific impairment in cardiomyocyte mitochondria activity has been documented. We demonstrated that the human fetal amniotic fluid-stem cell (hAFS) secretome, namely the secreted paracrine factors within the hAFS-conditioned medium (hAFS-CM), exerts pro-survival effects on Dox-exposed cardiomyocytes. Here, we provide a detailed comparison of the cardioprotective potential of hAFS-CM over the secretome of mesenchymal stromal cells from adipose tissue (hMSC-CM). hAFS and hMSC were preconditioned under hypoxia to enrich their secretome. The cardioprotective effects of hAFS/hMSC-CM were evaluated on murine neonatal ventricular cardiomyocytes (mNVCM) and on their fibroblast counterpart (mNVFib), and their long-term paracrine effects were investigated in a mouse model of Dox-induced cardiomyopathy. Both secretomes significantly contributed to preserving mitochondrial metabolism within Dox-injured cardiac cells. hAFS-CM and hMSC-CM inhibited body weight loss, improved myocardial function, reduced lipid peroxidation and counteracted the impairment of mitochondrial complex I activity, oxygen consumption, and ATP synthesis induced by Dox. The hAFS and hMSC secretomes can be exploited for inhibiting cardiotoxic detrimental side effects of Dox during cancer therapy, thus ensuring cardioprotection via combinatorial paracrine therapy in association with standard oncological treatments.Entities:
Keywords: cancer treatment; cardiomyocyte; cardiotoxicity; doxorubicin; mitochondria; oxidative stress; paracrine effect; stem cell
Year: 2021 PMID: 34359631 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13153729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639