| Literature DB >> 34704163 |
Nora Hlavac1, Deanna Bousalis1, Raffae N Ahmad1, Emily Pallack1, Angelique Vela2, Yuan Li1, Sahba Mobini1,3, Erin Patrick2, Christine E Schmidt4.
Abstract
Exogenous electrical fields have been explored in regenerative medicine to increase cellular expression of pro-regenerative growth factors. Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) are attractive for regenerative applications, specifically for neural repair. Little is known about the relationship between low-level electrical stimulation (ES) and ASC regenerative potentiation. In this work, patterns of ASC expression and secretion of growth factors (i.e., secretome) were explored across a range of ES parameters. ASCs were stimulated with low-level stimulation (20 mV/mm) at varied pulse frequencies, durations, and with alternating versus direct current. Frequency and duration had the most significant effects on growth factor expression. While a range of stimulation frequencies (1, 20, 1000 Hz) applied intermittently (1 h × 3 days) induced upregulation of general wound healing factors, neural-specific factors were only increased at 1 Hz. Moreover, the most optimal expression of neural growth factors was achieved when ASCs were exposed to 1 Hz pulses continuously for 24 h. In evaluation of secretome, apparent inconsistencies were observed across biological replications. Nonetheless, ASC secretome (from 1 Hz, 24 h ES) caused significant increase in neurite extension compared to non-stimulated control. Overall, ASCs are sensitive to ES parameters at low field strengths, notably pulse frequency and stimulation duration.Entities:
Keywords: Cell-based therapies; Frequency; Growth factor; Neural regeneration; Neurite outgrowth; SH-SY5Y; Schwann cell; Secretome
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34704163 DOI: 10.1007/s10439-021-02875-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Biomed Eng ISSN: 0090-6964 Impact factor: 3.934