| Literature DB >> 34884679 |
Doralisa Morrone1, Maria Elena Lucia Picoi1, Francesca Felice1, Andrea De Martino2, Cristian Scatena3, Paolo Spontoni1, Antonio Giuseppe Naccarato3, Rossella Di Stefano1,3, Uberto Bortolotti2, Massimo Dal Monte4, Stefano Pini5, Marianna Abelli5, Alberto Balbarini1.
Abstract
The mobilization of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) into circulation from bone marrow is well known to be present in several clinical settings, including acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, diabetes and peripheral vascular disease. The aim of this review was to explore the current literature focusing on the great opportunity that EPCs can have in terms of regenerative medicine.Entities:
Keywords: EPC; ischemic heart disease; progenitor cells
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34884679 PMCID: PMC8657735 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222312874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1A snapshot describing the various clinical conditions associated with EPC mobilization.
EPC measurement and variation.
| Study | Clinical Setting | Study Size (n. of Patients) | EPC Determination | Phenotype | Main Results (Number and Functionality of EPCs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Williamson et al. [ | Aging | - | Isolation from cord and peripheral blood of young (20–30 years) and old (60–70 year) subjects and expanded in vitro | Outgrowth endothelial cells (OECs): cobblestone morphology, | Proliferative, survival and tube-forming capacity of OECs is not significantly impaired with age. Migratory response of OECs declines with age (migratory capacity of human OECs toward VEGF and SDF-1a significantly declines with increasing age. Furthermore, the reduction in the chemotactic response of OECs significantly correlates with structural alterations of HS). |
| Thum et al. [ | // | - | Circulating EPC number and function of middle-aged subjects before and after treatment with recombinant growth hormone (IGF-1) compared with young controls | CD34+/CD133+/CD117+ and CD133+/VEGFR2+ peripheral cells | Middle-aged and elderly subjects had lower circulating CD133+/VEGFR-2+ EPCs with impaired function and increased senescence. GH treatment in middle-aged subjects elevated IGF-1 levels, increased circulating EPCs with improved colony forming and migratory capacity, enhanced incorporation into tube-like structures, and augmented endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression in EPCs comparable to that of the younger group. |
| Heiss et al. [ | // | 40 | Circulating EPC number and function in 20 young (25 ± 1 year) and 20 old (61 ± 2 years) healthy subjects without clinical evidence of other CV risk factors | KDR+/CD34+/or KDR+/CD133+ circulating cells, | There were no differences in the numbers of circulating EPCs. Older subjects had significantly impaired endothelium-dependent dilation of the brachial artery (flow-mediated dilation, FMD) in addition to a lower survival, migration, and proliferation capacity. |
| Chen et al. [ | Diabetes | - | Early and late EPCs by MNCs isolated from healthy subjects incubated with glucose/mannitol or drugs | Early EPCs: adherent cells double positive for acetylated LDL (acLDL) uptake and lectin binding | High glucose reduced the number and proliferation of early and late EPCs, enhanced EPC senescence and impaired the migration and tube formation of late EPCs. The effects of high glucose could be ameliorated by coincubation with an NO donor. |
| Fadini et al. [ | // | 219 | Circulating EPCs and progenitor cells (PCs) isolated from the peripheral blood of individuals with carbohydrate metabolism abnormalities | CD34+/KDR+ (EPCs) and CD34+ (PCs) | Circulating PCs and EPSs were inversely related to glucose tolerance. |
| Felice et al. [ | // | - | Isolated from total peripheral blood of healthy male donors (age 40 years) after 3 days of culture in a selective medium | Adherent cells positive for DiI-ac-LDL/Lectin and KDR+/VE-CAD+/vWF+/CD31+/C14+ | EPCs have a well-adaptive response to oxidative stress induced by constant and sustained high glucose exposure, maybe due to increased expression and activity of glutathione peroxidase allowing better cell survival. |
| Palombo et al. [ | // | 42 | Circulating EPCs and progenitor cells (PCs) isolated from peripheral blood of 16 uncomplicated young T1DM pts (mean age 18 ± 2 years) and 26 controls | CD34+/KDR+ (EPCs) and CD34+ (PCs) | Young subjects with relatively long-lasting T1DM free of overt clinical complications have a significantly lower count of circulating EPCs and a generalized preclinical involvement of large artery structure and function as compared to healthy controls. |
| Berezin et al. [ | Met. syndrome | 47 + 35 | Evaluation of circulating EPCs/MPCs in 47 patients with MetS without known CV disease and 35 healthy volunteers | CD45-/CD34+ (EPCs) and CD14+/Tie-2+ (MPCs) | Depletion of numerous circulating EPCs and MPCs in MetS patients was found. |
| Jialal et al. [ | // | 31 + 46 | Enumerate and functionally characterize EPCs in subjects with Met S. in comparison to healthy controls | KDR+/CD34+, functionality was assessed by CFU assay, migration and tubule formation. | MetS subjects without diabetes or CVD have decreased EPC numbers and impaired functionality as compared to control subjects. |
| Westerweel et al. [ | // | 29 | Evaluation of circulating EPCs in subjects with obesity and MetS; evaluation of the effect on EPC levels of two lipid-lowering treatments | CD34+/KDR+ | EPC levels are reduced in apparently healthy men with abdominal obesity and metabolic syndrome. Intensive lipid-lowering treatment increased circulating EPCs to control levels. |
| Shintani et al. [ | ACS | 16 + 8 | Evaluation of EPCs and MNCs in in patients with | EPCs: | This is the first clinical demonstration showing that lineage-committed EPCs and MNC (CD34+) cells, their putative |
| Massa et al. [ | ACS and SCAD | 26 + 10 + 17 | Phenotypic and functional analysis of circulating CD34+ HPCs in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) assessed from admission up to 60 days, in patients with stable angina pectoris (SA), and in healthy controls | HPCs: CD34+/CD45- | Spontaneous mobilization of both HPCs and EPCs occurs within a few hours from the onset of AMI and is detectable until 2 months. |
| Morrone et al. [ | SCAD | 55 | Investigate the association of stable ischemic heart disease with EPC levels in tissue and blood | CD34+/KDR+ | Patients with stable CAD had higher EPC density values (EPC/mm2) and were more likely to have lower EPC blood levels when compared with normal controls. |
| Samman et al. [ | Heart failure | 514 | Evaluation of the number of circulating PCs and the etiology and severity of HF and HF events | PCs: CD45med+/CD34+/CD133+/VEGF+/CXCR4+ | PC levels are lower in patients with HF, and lower PC counts are strongly and independently predictive of mortality. |
| Sandri et al. [ | // | 120 | Evaluation of number and function of EPCs in both physiologic aging and chronic heart failure (CHF), evaluation of beneficial effects of exercise training | CD34+/KDR+ | EPC numbers and function were lower in older and in CHF patients. Four weeks of exercise training was effective in improving EPC number and EPC function in CHF patients. |
| Michelucci et al. [ | // | 85 | Evaluate the association between circulating PCs and EPCs and left ventricular (LV) remodeling in CHF | CPCs: CD34+, CD133+ and CD34+/CD133+ | Data suggest a correlation between higher number of circulating EPCs and a less severe pathological state, with more preserved LV function and a lower degree of ventricular remodeling in CHF patients. |
| Di Stefano et al. [ | PAD | 23 | Investigate the effects of iloprost on EPC levels in vivo in CLI (critical limb ischemia) patients | Early EPC: adherent cells with double positivity ac-LDL/UEA; also CD14+/CD45+ | Iloprost increases EPC number in peripheral blood in vivo; such an effect may have therapeutic relevance. |
| Chironi et al. [ | // | 84 | To assess whether circulating EPCs can be considered as a cardiovascular risk marker before event has occurred | CD34+/KDR+ | EPC numbers decreased in the presence of carotid, aortic or femoral plaque as compared to the absence of plaque; in the presence of three sites affected, the reduction was greater. |
| Di Stefano et al. [ | Mental disorder | 107 | Evaluate the impact of depression on EPC levels in | CD34+/CD133+/KDR+ | ACS patients with MDE (major depressive episode) have a |
| Felice et al. [ | // | 111 | Evaluate the impact of depression and anxiety on EPC levels in ACS patients | CD34+/CD133+/KDR+ | The study indicates that EPCs circulate in decreased numbers in ACS patients with depression or anxiety. |
| Felice et al. [ | Extreme climatic exposure | 6 | Evaluate the response of circulating EPCs, SCF, SDF-1, ET-1 and sICAM-1 to extreme temperature in volunteers participating in a 2 month Antarctic mission, according to the Italian Antarctic Research Programme (PNRA). | CD34+/CD133+/KDR+ | Circulating EPC numbers were significantly reduced after the mission, while plasma levels of SCF were significantly increased after the mission. |