Litcius/Paper detail

Human mesenchymal stromal/stem cells recruit resident pericytes and induce blood vessels maturation to repair experimental spinal cord injury in rats

Karla Menezes, Bárbara Gomes da Rosa, Catarina Freitas, Aline Silva da Cruz, Raphael de Siqueira Santos, Marcos Assis Nascimento, Daiana V. Lopes, Martín Bonamino, Maria Isabel D. Rossi, Radovan Borojević, Tatiana Coelho‐Sampaio

2020Scientific Reports38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Angiogenesis is considered to mediate the beneficial effects of mesenchymal cell therapy in spinal cord injury. After a moderate balloon-compression injury in rats, injections of either human adipose tissue-derived stromal/stem cells (hADSCs) or their conditioned culture media (CM-hADSC) elicited angiogenesis around the lesion site. Both therapies increased vascular density, but the presence of hADSCs in the tissue was required for the full maturation of new blood vessels. Only animals that received hADSC significantly improved their open field locomotion, assessed by the BBB score. Animals that received CM-hADSC only, presented haemorrhagic areas and lack pericytes. Proteomic analyses of human angiogenesis-related factors produced by hADSCs showed that both pro- and anti-angiogenic factors were produced by hADSCs in vitro, but only those related to vessel maturation were detectable in vivo. hADSCs produced PDGF-AA only after insertion into the injured spinal cord. hADSCs attracted resident pericytes expressing NG2, α-SMA, PDGF-Rβ and nestin to the lesion, potentially contributing to blood vessel maturation. We conclude that the presence of hADSCs in the injured spinal cord is essential for tissue repair.

Topics & Concepts

Mesenchymal stem cellAngiogenesisStem cellPathologySpinal cord injuryStromal cellPericyteNestinMedicineAdipose tissueSpinal cordBiologyAnatomyEndothelial stem cellCancer researchCell biologyNeural stem cellIn vitroInternal medicinePsychiatryBiochemistryMesenchymal stem cell researchSpinal Cord Injury ResearchTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine