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Stem cell secretome, regeneration, and clinical translation: a narrative review

Chukwuweike U. Gwam, Nequesha Mohammed, Xue Ma

2021Annals of Translational Medicine73 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

tissue restoration. Stem cell therapy remain at the center of regenerative medicine, due to early reports on its pluripotent differentiating capability. However, more recent reports suggest the paracrine activity of stem cells, and not direct differentiation, as the cause of its therapeutic effects. This paracrine activity can be harnessed in the form of conditioned media. Despite these capabilities, the clinical translation of stem cell conditioned media (i.e., secretome) is precluded by a variety of factors. These limitations include standardization of stem cell-conditioned media formulation, characterization of bioactive factors in conditioned media and dosing, optimizing modes of delivery, and uncovering of mechanisms of action of stem cell conditioned media. The purpose of this review is to provide a focused narration on the aforementioned preclusions pertaining to the clinical translation of stem cell conditioned media. Specifically, we will report on commonly use methodologies for the development of stem cell conditioned media, modalities for conditioned media characterization, modes of delivery, and postulated mechanisms of action for stem cell conditioned media in regenerative medicine.

Topics & Concepts

Stem cellRegenerative medicineParacrine signallingRegeneration (biology)Induced pluripotent stem cellNarrative reviewNeuroscienceBiologyCell biologyMedicineEmbryonic stem cellIntensive care medicineGeneReceptorBiochemistryPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineMesenchymal stem cell research
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