1.Effects of exosomes from human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells on pulmonary vascular endothelial cells injury in septic mice and its mechanism.
Wei Xia CAI ; Kuo SHEN ; Tao CAO ; Jing WANG ; Ming ZHAO ; Ke Jia WANG ; Yue ZHANG ; Jun Tao HAN ; Da Hai HU ; Ke TAO
Chinese Journal of Burns 2022;38(3):266-275
Objective: To investigate the effects of exosomes from human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ADSCs) on pulmonary vascular endothelial cells (PMVECs) injury in septic mice and its mechanism. Methods: The experimental research method was adopted. The primary ADSCs were isolated and cultured from the discarded fresh adipose tissue of 3 patients (female, 10-25 years old), who were admitted to the First Affiliated Hospital of Air Force Medical University undergoing abdominal surgery, and the cell morphology was observed by inverted phase contrast microscope on the 5th day. The expressions of CD29, CD34, CD44, CD45, CD73, and CD90 of ADSCs in the third passage were detected by flow cytometry. The third to the fifth passage of ADSCs were collected, and their exosomes from the cell supernatant were obtained by differential ultracentrifugation, and the shape, particle size, and the protein expressions of CD9, CD63, tumor susceptibility gene 101 (TSG101), and β-actin of exosomes were detected, respectively, by transmission electron microscopy, nano-particle tracking analysis and Western blotting. Twenty-four adult male BALB/c mice were adopted and were divided into normal control group, caecal ligation perforation (CLP) alone group, and CLP+ADSC-exosome group with each group of 8 according to random number table (the same grouping method below) and were treated accordingly. At 24 h after operation, tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α) and interleukin 1β (IL-1β) levels of mice serum were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, and lung tissue morphology of mice was detected by hematoxylin-eosin and myeloperoxidase staining, and the expression of 8-hydroxy-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) of mouse lung cells was detected by immunofluorescence method. Primary PMVECs were obtained from 1-month-old C57 mice regardless gender by tissue block method. The expression of CD31 of PMVECs was detected by immunofluorescence and flow cytometry. The third passage of PMVECs was co-cultured with ADSCs derived exosomes for 12 h, and the phagocytosis of exosomes by PMVECs was detected by PKH26 kit. The third passage of PMVECs were adopted and were divided into blank control group, macrophage supernatant alone group, and macrophage supernatant+ADSC-exosome group, with 3 wells in each group, which were treated accordingly. After 24 h, the content of reactive oxygen species in cells was detected by flow cytometry, the expression of 8-OHdG in cells was detected by immunofluorescence, and Transwell assay was used to determine the permeability of cell monolayer. The number of samples in above were all 3. Data were statistically analyzed with one-way analysis of variance and least significant difference t test. Results: The primary ADSCs were isolated and cultured to day 5, growing densely in a spindle shape with a typical swirl-like. The percentages of CD29, CD44, CD73 and CD90 positive cells of ADSCs in the third passage were all >90%, and the percentages of CD34 and CD45 positive cells were <5%. Exosomes derived from ADSCs of the third to fifth passages showed a typical double-cavity disc-like structure with an average particle size of 103 nm, and the protein expressions of CD9, CD63 and TSG101 of exosomes were positive, while the protein expression of β-actin of exosomes was negative. At 24 h after operation, compared with those in normal control group, both the levels of TNF-α and IL-1β of mice serum in CLP alone group were significantly increased (with t values of 28.76 and 29.69, respectively, P<0.01); compared with those in CLP alone group, both the content of TNF-α and IL-1β of mice serum in CLP+ADSC-exosome group was significantly decreased (with t values of 9.90 and 4.76, respectively, P<0.05 or P<0.01). At 24 h after surgery, the pulmonary tissue structure of mice in normal control group was clear and complete without inflammatory cell infiltration; compared with those in normal control group, the pulmonary tissue edema and inflammatory cell infiltration of mice in CLP alone group were more obvious; compared with those in CLP alone group, the pulmonary tissue edema and inflammatory cell infiltration of mice in CLP+ADSC-exosome group were significantly reduced. At 24 h after operation, endothelial cells in lung tissues of mice in 3 groups showed positive expression of CD31; compared with that in normal control group, the fluorescence intensity of 8-OHdG positive cells of the lung tissues of mice in CLP alone group was significantly increased, and compared with that in CLP alone group, the fluorescence intensity of 8-OHdG positive cells in the lung tissues of mice in CLP+ADSC-exosome group was significantly decreased. The PMVECs in the 3rd passage showed CD31 positive expression by immunofluorescence, and the result of flow cytometry showed that CD31 positive cells accounted for 99.5%. At 12 h after co-culture, ADSC-derived exosomes were successfully phagocytose by PMVECs and entered its cytoplasm. At 12 h after culture of the third passage of PMVECs, compared with that in blank control group, the fluorescence intensity of reactive oxygen species of PMVECs in macrophage supernatant alone group was significantly increased (t=15.73, P<0.01); compared with that in macrophage supernatant alone group, the fluorescence intensity of reactive oxygen species of PMVECs in macrophage supernatant+ADSC-exosome group was significantly decreased (t=4.72, P<0.01). At 12 h after culture of the third passage of PMVECs, and the 8-OHdG positive fluorescence intensity of PMVECs in macrophage supernatant alone group was significantly increased; and compared with that in blank control group, the 8-OHdG positive fluorescence intensity of PMVECs in macrophage+ADSC-exosome supernatant group was between blank control group and macrophage supernatant alone group. At 12 h after culture of the third passage PMVECs, compared with that in blank control group, the permeability of PMVECs monolayer in macrophage supernatant alone group was significantly increased (t=6.34, P<0.01); compared with that in macrophage supernatant alone group, the permeability of PMVECs monolayer cells in macrophage supernatant+ADSC-exosome group was significantly decreased (t=2.93, P<0.05). Conclusions: Exosomes derived from ADSCs can ameliorate oxidative damage in mouse lung tissue, decrease the level of reactive oxygen species, 8-OHdG expression, and permeability of PMVECs induced by macrophage supernatant.
Animals
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Endothelial Cells/metabolism*
;
Exosomes/metabolism*
;
Female
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Humans
;
Lung Injury/metabolism*
;
Male
;
Mesenchymal Stem Cells/metabolism*
;
Mice
;
Sepsis/pathology*
2.The Latest Research Progress of Mesenchymal Stem Cells Derived from Multiple Myeloma Patients --Review.
Xiao-Sui LING ; Hai-Ping HE ; Li-Hua ZHANG ; Fan LI
Journal of Experimental Hematology 2023;31(4):1233-1236
Multiple myeloma (MM) is a malignant proliferative disease of plasma cells. Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) play an important role in the progression of MM. Compared with normal donor derived MSC (ND-MSC), MM patients derived MSC (MM-MSC) exhibit abnormalities in genes, signaling pathways, protein expression levels and cytokines secreted by themselves. Moreover, the exosomes of MM-MSC can interact with the bone marrow microenvironment. The above reasons can lead to MM cell proliferation, chemoresistance, impaired osteogenic differentiation of MM-MSC, and affect the immunomodulatory capacity of MM patients. In order to further understand the pathogenesis and related influencing factors of MM, this paper reviews the latest research progress of MM-MSC.
Humans
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Multiple Myeloma/pathology*
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Osteogenesis
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Mesenchymal Stem Cells
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Cell Differentiation
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Bone Marrow/metabolism*
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Bone Marrow Cells/metabolism*
;
Tumor Microenvironment
3.Intramarrow injection of beta-catenin-activated, but not naive mesenchymal stromal cells stimulates self-renewal of hematopoietic stem cells in bone marrow.
Ji Yeon AHN ; Gyeongsin PARK ; Jae Seung SHIM ; Jong Wook LEE ; Il Hoan OH
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2010;42(2):122-131
Bone marrow mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been implicated in the microenvironmental support of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and often co-transplanted with HSCs to facilitate recovery of ablated bone marrows. However, the precise effect of transplanted MSCs on HSC regeneration remains unclear because the kinetics of HSC self-renewal in vivo after co-transplantation has not been monitored. In this study, we examined the effects of intrafemoral injection of MSCs on HSC self-renewal in rigorous competitive repopulating unit (CRU) assays using congenic transplantation models in which stromal progenitors (CFU-F) were ablated by irradiation. Interestingly, naive MSCs injected into femur contributed to the reconstitution of a stromal niche in the ablated bone marrows, but did not exert a stimulatory effect on the in-vivo self-renewal of co-transplanted HSCs regardless of the transplantation methods. In contrast, HSC self-renewal was four-fold higher in bone marrows intrafemorally injected with beta-catenin-activated MSCs. These results reveal that naive MSCs lack a stimulatory effect on HSC self-renewal in-vivo and that stroma must be activated during recoveries of bone marrows. Stromal targeting of wnt/beta-catenin signals may be a strategy to activate such a stem cell niche for efficient regeneration of bone marrow HSCs.
Animals
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Bone Marrow/metabolism/pathology
;
Hematopoietic Stem Cell Mobilization
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*Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
;
Hematopoietic Stem Cells/pathology
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Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation
;
Mesenchymal Stem Cells/*metabolism/pathology
;
Mice
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Mice, Inbred C57BL
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Radiation Chimera
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Regeneration
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Stem Cell Niche/metabolism/pathology
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Stromal Cells/*metabolism/pathology
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*Transplantation Conditioning
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beta Catenin/*metabolism
4.Tumor associated stem/progenitor cells in tumorigenesis and progression of cancer.
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2011;40(3):145-146
Animals
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Cell Proliferation
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Disease Progression
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Endothelial Cells
;
pathology
;
Humans
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Indoleamine-Pyrrole 2,3,-Dioxygenase
;
metabolism
;
Mesenchymal Stromal Cells
;
immunology
;
metabolism
;
pathology
;
Neoplasms
;
immunology
;
pathology
;
Neoplastic Stem Cells
;
pathology
;
Neovascularization, Pathologic
;
pathology
;
Stem Cells
;
pathology
;
T-Lymphocytes
;
immunology
;
pathology
5.Cellular mechanism in the fibrogenesis of liver fibrosis.
Chinese Journal of Hepatology 2012;20(8):563-564
Animals
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Cell Differentiation
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Cytokines
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metabolism
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Disease Progression
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Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition
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Extracellular Matrix
;
metabolism
;
Fibroblasts
;
metabolism
;
pathology
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Hepatic Stellate Cells
;
metabolism
;
pathology
;
Humans
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Liver
;
metabolism
;
pathology
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Liver Cirrhosis
;
etiology
;
metabolism
;
pathology
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Stem Cells
;
metabolism
;
pathology
6.Extracellular vesicle-carried GTF2I from mesenchymal stem cells promotes the expression of tumor-suppressive FAT1 and inhibits stemness maintenance in thyroid carcinoma.
Jie SHAO ; Wenjuan WANG ; Baorui TAO ; Zihao CAI ; Haixia LI ; Jinhong CHEN
Frontiers of Medicine 2023;17(6):1186-1203
Through bioinformatics predictions, we identified that GTF2I and FAT1 were downregulated in thyroid carcinoma (TC). Further, Pearson's correlation coefficient revealed a positive correlation between GTF2I expression and FAT1 expression. Therefore, we selected them for this present study, where the effects of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell-derived EVs (BMSDs-EVs) enriched with GTF2I were evaluated on the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and stemness maintenance in TC. The under-expression of GTF2I and FAT1 was validated in TC cell lines. Ectopically expressed GTF2I and FAT1 were found to augment malignant phenotypes of TC cells, EMT, and stemness maintenance. Mechanistic studies revealed that GTF2I bound to the promoter region of FAT1 and consequently upregulated its expression. MSC-EVs could shuttle GTF2I into TPC-1 cells, where GTF2I inhibited TC malignant phenotypes, EMT, and stemness maintenance by increasing the expression of FAT1 and facilitating the FAT1-mediated CDK4/FOXM1 downregulation. In vivo experiments confirmed that silencing of GTF2I accelerated tumor growth in nude mice. Taken together, our work suggests that GTF2I transferred by MSC-EVs confer antioncogenic effects through the FAT1/CDK4/FOXM1 axis and may be used as a promising biomarker for TC treatment.
Mice
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Animals
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Cell Line, Tumor
;
Cell Proliferation
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Mice, Nude
;
Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition
;
Thyroid Neoplasms/pathology*
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Extracellular Vesicles/pathology*
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Mesenchymal Stem Cells
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Transcription Factors, TFIII/metabolism*
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Neoplastic Stem Cells/pathology*
8.Angiogenic effect of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells transfected with human VEGF gene on myocardial infarcts in rats.
Wen-wu ZHOU ; Jian-guo HU ; Jin-fu YANG ; Ling LIN ; Xin-min ZHOU ; Tao TANG
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2006;31(5):763-771
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the angiogenic effect of the bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) transfected with human vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF(165)) gene on myocardial infarcts in rats.
METHODS:
The animal model of heart ischemic was established by ligating the left anterior descending coronary artery in Wistar rats. The ligated rats were divided into 4 groups (n=12 each), and 2 weeks later they were injected hVEGF-transfected MSC at the heart infarct zone (Group A), MSC (Group B), liposome-hVEGF gene plasmid (Group C), and medium (Group D). Four weeks after the injection, the capillary density of the infracted zone and the expression of human VEGF in vivo were examined.
RESULTS:
Four weeks after the transplantation,the capillary density was significantly greater in Group A than that in Group B and Group D, slightly greater than that in Group C. The highest expression of hVEGF was Group A, and followed by Group C, Group B, and Group D.
CONCLUSION
MSC is helpful for the stable expression of hVEGF gene, and is an ideal cellular vehicle for VEGF genes.
Animals
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Bone Marrow Cells
;
cytology
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Coronary Circulation
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Humans
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Male
;
Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation
;
Mesenchymal Stem Cells
;
metabolism
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Myocardial Infarction
;
metabolism
;
pathology
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Neovascularization, Physiologic
;
Rats
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Rats, Wistar
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Transfection
;
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A
;
genetics
9.Hepatocyte growth factor gene-modified bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells transplantation promotes angiogenesis in a rat model of hindlimb ischemia.
Guan-hua SU ; Yu-fei SUN ; Yong-xin LU ; Xin-xin SHUAI ; Yu-hua LIAO ; Qi-yun LIU ; Jun HAN ; Ping LUO
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2013;33(4):511-519
Angiogenic gene therapy and cell-based therapy for peripheral arterial disease(PAD) have been studied intensively currently. This study aimed to investigate whether combining mesenchymal stem cells(MSCs) transplantation with ex vivo human hepatocyte growth factor(HGF) gene transfer was more therapeutically efficient than the MSCs therapy alone in a rat model of hindlimb ischemia. One week after establishing hindlimb ischemia models, Sprague-Dawley(SD) rats were randomized to receive HGF gene-modified MSCs transplantation(HGF-MSC group), untreated MSCs transplantation (MSC group), or PBS injection(PBS group), respectively. Three weeks after injection, angiogenesis was significantly induced by both MSCs and HGF-MSCs transplantation, and capillary density was the highest in the HGF-MSC group. The number of transplanted cell-derived endothelial cells was greater in HGF-MSC group than in MSC group after one week treatment. The expression of angiogenic cytokines such as HGF and VEGF in local ischemic muscles was more abundant in HGF-MSC group than in the other two groups. In vitro, the conditioned media obtained from HGF-MSCs cultures exerted proproliferative and promigratory effects on endothelial cells. It is concluded that HGF gene-modified MSCs transplantation therapy may induce more potent angiogenesis than the MSCs therapy alone. Engraftment of MSCs combined with angiogenic gene delivery may be a promising therapeutic strategy for the treatment of severe PAD.
Animals
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Bone Marrow
;
metabolism
;
pathology
;
Bone Marrow Transplantation
;
Cells, Cultured
;
Hepatocyte Growth Factor
;
genetics
;
Hindlimb
;
pathology
;
Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation
;
Mesenchymal Stromal Cells
;
metabolism
;
pathology
;
Neovascularization, Physiologic
;
genetics
;
Rats
10.Therapeutic effect of hepatocyte growth factor-secreting mesenchymal stem cells in a rat model of liver fibrosis.
Myung Deok KIM ; Sung Soo KIM ; Hyun Young CHA ; Seung Hun JANG ; Da Young CHANG ; Wookhwan KIM ; Haeyoung SUH-KIM ; Jae Ho LEE
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2014;46(8):e110-
Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) have been reported to be beneficial for the treatment of liver fibrosis. Here, we investigated the use of genetically engineered MSCs that overexpress hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) as a means to improve their therapeutic effect in liver fibrosis. Liver fibrosis was induced by intraperitoneal injection of dimethylnitrosamine. HGF-secreting MSCs (MSCs/HGF) were prepared by transducing MSCs with an adenovirus carrying HGF-encoding cDNA. MSCs or MSCs/HGF were injected directly into the spleen of fibrotic rats. Tissue fibrosis was assessed by histological analysis 12 days after stem cell injection. Although treatment with MSCs reduced fibrosis, treatment with MSCs/HGF produced a more significant reduction and was associated with elevated HGF levels in the portal vein. Collagen levels in the liver extract were decreased after MSC/HGF therapy, suggesting recovery from fibrosis. Furthermore, liver function was improved in animals receiving MSCs/HGF, indicating that MSC/HGF therapy resulted not only in reduction of liver fibrosis but also in improvement of hepatocyte function. Assessment of cell and biochemical parameters revealed that mRNA levels of the fibrogenic cytokines PDGF-bb and TGF-beta1 were significantly decreased after MSC/HGF therapy. Subsequent to the decrease in collagen, expression of matrix metalloprotease-9 (MMP-9), MMP-13, MMP-14 and urokinase-type plasminogen activator was augmented following MSC/HGF, whereas tissue inhibitor of metalloprotease-1 (TIMP-1) expression was reduced. In conclusion, therapy with MSCs/HGF resulted in an improved therapeutic effect compared with MSCs alone, probably because of the anti-fibrotic activity of HGF. Thus, MSC/HGF represents a promising approach toward a cell therapy for liver fibrosis.
Animals
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Cell Engineering
;
Cells, Cultured
;
*Genetic Engineering
;
Hepatocyte Growth Factor/analysis/*genetics
;
Humans
;
Liver/metabolism/pathology
;
Liver Cirrhosis/pathology/*therapy
;
Male
;
*Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation
;
Mesenchymal Stromal Cells/*metabolism
;
Rats
;
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
;
*Up-Regulation