Product Citations: 18

The aim of this study was to investigate whether HUCMSCsWnt10b could promote long bone fracture healing. Commercially-available HUCMSCsEmp (human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells transfected with empty vector) in hydrogel, HUCMSCsWnt10b in hydrogel and HUCMSCsWnt10b with the Wnt signaling pathway inhibitor IWR-1 were transplanted into the fracture site in a rat model of femoral fracture. We found that transplantation of HUCMSCsWnt10b significantly accelerated bone healing in a rat model of femoral fracture. Meanwhile, three-point bending test proved that the mechanical properties of the bone at the fracture site in the HUCMSCWnt10b treatment group were significantly better than those of the other treatment groups. To understand the cellular mechanism, we explored the viability of periosteal stem cells (PSCs), as they contribute the greatest number of osteoblast lineage cells to the callus. In line with in vivo data, we found that conditioned medium from HUCMSCsWnt10b enhanced the migration and osteogenic differentiation of PSCs. Furthermore, conditioned medium from HUCMSCsWnt10b also induced endothelial cells to form capillary-like structures in a tube formation assay, which was blocked by SU5416, an angiogenesis inhibitor, suggesting that enhanced vessel formation and growth also contribute to accelerated hard callus formation. In summary, our study demonstrates that HUCMSCsWnt10b promote fracture healing via accelerated hard callus formation, possibly due to enhanced osteogenic differentiation of PSCs and vessel growth. Therefore, HUCMSCsWnt10b may be a promising treatment for long bone fractures.

  • IHC
  • Stem Cells and Developmental Biology

Accelerating the process of bone regeneration is of great interest for surgeons and basic scientists alike. Recently, umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (UCMSCs) are considered clinically applicable for tissue regeneration due to their noninvasive harvesting and better viability. Nonetheless, the bone regenerative ability of human UCMSCs (HUCMSCs) is largely unknown. This study aimed to investigate whether Wnt10b-overexpressing HUCMSCs have enhanced bone regeneration ability in a rat model.
A rat calvarial defect was performed on 8-week old male Sprague Dawley rats. Commercially purchased HUCMSCsEmp in hydrogel, HUCMSCsWnt10b in hydrogel and HUCMSCsWnt10b with IWR-1 were placed in the calvarial bone defect right after surgery on rats (N = 8 rats for each group). Calvaria were harvested for micro-CT analysis and histology four weeks after surgery. CFU-F and multi-differentiation assay by oil red staining, alizarin red staining and RT-PCR (real-time polymerase chain reaction) were performed on HUCMSCsEmp and HUCMSCsWnt10b in vitro. Conditioned media from HUCMSCsEmp and HUCMSCsWnt10b were collected and used to treat human umbilical cord vein endothelial cells in Matrigel to access vessel formation capacity by tube formation assay.
Alizarin red staining, oil red staining and RT-PCR results showed robust osteogenic differentiation but poor adipogenic differentiation ability of HUCMSCsWnt10b. Furthermore, HUCMSCsWnt10b could accelerate bone defect healing, which was likely due to enhanced angiogenesis after the HUCMSCsWnt10b treatment, because more CD31+ vessels and increased vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A) expression were observed, compared with the HUCMSCsEmp treatment. Conditioned media from HUCMSCsWnt10b also induced endothelial cells to form vessel tubes in a tube formation assay, which could be abolished by SU5416, an angiogenesis inhibitor.
To our knowledge, this is the first study providing empirical evidence that HUCMSCsWnt10b can enhance their ability to heal calvarial bone defects via VEGF-mediated angiogenesis.
HUCMSCsWnt10b can accelerate critical size calvaria and are a new promising therapeutic cell source for fracture nonunion healing.
© 2020 The Author(s).

  • IHC
  • Stem Cells and Developmental Biology

One current concept suggests that unchecked proliferation of clonally selected precursors of endothelial cells (ECs) contribute to severe pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). We hypothesized that clonally selected ECs expressing the progenitor marker CD117 promote severe occlusive pulmonary hypertension (PH). The remodelled pulmonary arteries of PAH patients harboured CD117+ ECs. Rat lung CD117+ ECs underwent four generations of clonal expansion to enrich hyperproliferative ECs. The resulting clonally enriched ECs behaved like ECs, as measured by in vitro and in vivo angiogenesis assays. The same primitive ECs showed a limited ability for mesenchymal lineage differentiation. Endothelial differentiation and function were enhanced by blocking TGF-β signalling, promoting bone morphogenic protein (BMP) signalling. The transplantation of the EC clones caused arterio-occlusive PH in rats exposed to chronic hypoxia. These EC clones engrafted in the pulmonary arteries. Yet cessation of chronic hypoxia promoted lung cell apoptosis and resolution of vascular lesions. In conclusion, this is to the best of our knowledge, the first report that clonally enriched primitive ECs promote occlusive pulmonary arteriopathy and severe PH. These primitive EC clones further give rise to cells of endothelial and mesenchymal lineage as directed by BMP and TGF-β signaling.

  • Rattus norvegicus (Rat)
  • Cardiovascular biology

Following the tremendous development of hydrogels for cell therapy, there is now a growing need for surgical techniques to validate in vivo scaffold benefits for islet transplantation. Therefore, we propose a newly designed surgical procedure involving the injection of hydrogel-embedded pancreatic islets in the omentum, which is considered a favorable environment for cell survival and function. Our technique, called h-Omental Matrix Islet filliNG (hOMING) was designed to test the benefits of hydrogel on islet survival and function in vivo. Islets were implanted in the omentum of diabetic rats using the hOMING technique and alginate as an islet carrier. Blood glucose and C-peptide levels were recorded to assess graft function. After 2 months, grafts were explanted and studied using insulin and vessel staining. All rats that underwent hOMING exhibited graft function characterized by a glycemia decrease and a C-peptidemia increase ( P < 0.001 compared with preoperative levels). Furthermore, hOMING appeared to preserve islet morphology and insulin content and allowed the proper revascularization of grafted islets. The results suggest that hOMING is a viable and promising approach to test in vivo the benefits of hydrogel administration for islet transplantation into the omental tissue.

Host genetic modifiers of nonproductive angiogenesis inhibit breast cancer.

In Breast Cancer Research and Treatment on 1 August 2017 by Flister, M. J., Tsaih, S. W., et al.

Multiple aspects of the tumor microenvironment (TME) impact breast cancer, yet the genetic modifiers of the TME are largely unknown, including those that modify tumor vascular formation and function.
To discover host TME modifiers, we developed a system called the Consomic/Congenic Xenograft Model (CXM). In CXM, human breast cancer cells are orthotopically implanted into genetically engineered consomic xenograft host strains that are derived from two parental strains with different susceptibilities to breast cancer. Because the genetic backgrounds of the xenograft host strains differ, whereas the inoculated tumor cells are the same, any phenotypic variation is due to TME-specific modifier(s) on the substituted chromosome (consomic) or subchromosomal region (congenic). Here, we assessed TME modifiers of growth, angiogenesis, and vascular function of tumors implanted in the SSIL2Rγ and SS.BN3IL2Rγ CXM strains.
Breast cancer xenografts implanted in SS.BN3IL2Rγ (consomic) had significant tumor growth inhibition compared with SSIL2Rγ (parental control), despite a paradoxical increase in the density of blood vessels in the SS.BN3IL2Rγ tumors. We hypothesized that decreased growth of SS.BN3IL2Rγ tumors might be due to nonproductive angiogenesis. To test this possibility, SSIL2Rγ and SS.BN3IL2Rγ tumor vascular function was examined by dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI), micro-computed tomography (micro-CT), and ex vivo analysis of primary blood endothelial cells, all of which revealed altered vascular function in SS.BN3IL2Rγ tumors compared with SSIL2Rγ. Gene expression analysis also showed a dysregulated vascular signaling network in SS.BN3IL2Rγ tumors, among which DLL4 was differentially expressed and co-localized to a host TME modifier locus (Chr3: 95-131 Mb) that was identified by congenic mapping.
Collectively, these data suggest that host genetic modifier(s) on RNO3 induce nonproductive angiogenesis that inhibits tumor growth through the DLL4 pathway.

  • IHC-IF
  • Cancer Research
  • Genetics
View this product on CiteAb