| Literature DB >> 35269692 |
Yuchen Zhang1,2, Naijun Dong1,2, Huanle Hong1, Jingxuan Qi1, Shibo Zhang1, Jiao Wang1.
Abstract
Due to aging of the world's population, stroke has become increasingly prevalent, leading to a rise in socioeconomic burden. In the recent past, stroke research and treatment have become key scientific issues that need urgent solutions, with a sharp focus on stem cell transplantation, which is known to treat neurodegenerative diseases related to traumatic brain injuries, such as stroke. Indeed, stem cell therapy has brought hope to many stroke patients, both in animal and clinical trials. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are most commonly utilized in biological medical research, due to their pluripotency and universality. MSCs are often obtained from adipose tissue and bone marrow, and transplanted via intravenous injection. Therefore, this review will discuss the therapeutic mechanisms of MSCs and extracellular vehicles (EVs) secreted by MSCs for stroke, such as in attenuating inflammation through immunomodulation, releasing trophic factors to promote therapeutic effects, inducing angiogenesis, promoting neurogenesis, reducing the infarct volume, and replacing damaged cells.Entities:
Keywords: extracellular vehicle; mesenchymal stem cell; stem cell transplantation; stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35269692 PMCID: PMC8910569 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23052550
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The origins, differentiation ability, and delivery methods of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). MSCs are mainly derived from adipose tissue (AT), bone marrow (BM), umbilical cord blood (UCB), and umbilical cord (UC). MSCs have the potential to differentiate into adipocytes, chondrocytes, osteoblasts, neurons, and glial cells. MSCs can be delivered by intracerebral injection (IC), intracisternal/cerebroventricular injection (ICV), intranasal delivery (IN), and intravascular routes of delivery, such as intravenous injection (IV) or intra-arterial infusion (IA).
Proteins involved in the therapeutic mechanism of MSCs.
| Therapeutic Benefits | Proteins | Mechanisms |
|---|---|---|
| Attenuate inflammation through immunomodulation | IL-1, IFN-γ, TNF-α, MCP-1 | Decreased pro-inflammatory cytokines to attenuate inflammation [ |
| IL-4, IL-10, TNF-β | Increased anti-inflammatory cytokines to attenuate inflammation [ | |
| PGE2 | Mediated the expression of TNF-α and IFN-γ [ | |
| HMGB1 | Late pro-inflammatory cytokine [ | |
| Release trophic factors to promote therapeutic effects | BDNF | Promoted neurological recovery [ |
| GDNF | Reduced infarct volume [ | |
| NGF | Prevented neuron apoptosis and increased neuron proliferation [ | |
| VEGF | Induced angiogenesis [ | |
| PDGF | Promoted the migration of cells, promoted the growth of primary cortical neurons, inhibited neuroinflammation, and promoted angiogenesis and axon growth [ | |
| Induce angiogenesis | Ang1 and tyrosine protein kinase receptor Tie-2 | Increased these proteins to increase blood vessel density at the site of vascular injury [ |
| VEGF and VEGF receptor 2 (Flk1) | ||
| Proliferate neuroblasts | Axonal growth-associated proteins and axonal growth-inhibiting proteins | Increased axonal growth-associated proteins and decreased axonal growth-inhibiting proteins to promote axonal growth [ |
| Collagen IV and tight junction protein ZO-1 | Increased these proteins to decrease BBB disruption and neuronal loss [ | |
| p53 protein | Reduced the activity of p53 protein to decrease neuron apoptosis [ | |
| Replace damaged cells | MAP2 and NeuN | Differentiated into new neurons to replace damaged neurons [ |
| GFAP and CNPase | Differentiated into new glial cells to replace damaged glial cells [ |
Figure 2The therapeutic mechanisms of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and extracellular vehicles (EVs) secreted by MSCs for stroke. After stroke, the vessel was infarct, and neurons were damaged. Transplantation of MSCs could play a therapeutic role. MSCs secreted factors and EVs to attenuate inflammation through immunomodulation, release trophic factors to promote therapeutic effects, induce angiogenesis, promote neurogenesis, reduce infarct volume, and replace damaged cells.