Lentiviral overexpression of VEGFC in transplanted MSCs leads to resolution of swelling in a mouse tail lymphedema model

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q3 HEMATOLOGY
Eleftheria Michalaki, Josephine M. Rudd, Lauren Liebman, Rahul Wadhwani, Levi B. Wood, Nick J. Willett, J. Brandon Dixon
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background

Dysfunction of the lymphatic system following injury, disease, or cancer treatment can lead to lymphedema, a debilitating condition with no cure. Despite the various physical therapy and surgical options available, most treatments are palliative and fail to address the underlying lymphatic vascular insufficiency driving lymphedema progression. Stem cell therapy provides a promising alternative in the treatment of various chronic diseases with a wide range of therapeutic effects that reduce inflammation, fibrosis, and oxidative stress, while promoting lymphatic vessel (LV) regeneration. Specifically, stem cell transplantation is suggested to promote LV restoration, rebuild lymphatic circulation, and thus potentially be utilized towards an effective lymphedema treatment. In addition to stem cells, studies have proposed the administration of vascular endothelial growth factor C (VEGFC) to promote lymphangiogenesis and decrease swelling in lymphedema.

Aims

Here, we seek to combine the benefits of stem cell therapy, which provides a cellular therapeutic approach that can respond to the tissue environment, and VEGFC administration to restore lymphatic drainage.

Materials & Methods

Specifically, we engineered mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) to overexpress VEGFC using a lentiviral vector (hVEGFC MSC) and investigated their therapeutic efficacy in improving LV function and tissue swelling using near infrared (NIR) imaging, and lymphatic regeneration in a single LV ligation mouse tail lymphedema model.

Results

First, we showed that overexpression of VEGFC using lentiviral transduction led to an increase in VEGFC protein synthesis in vitro. Then, we demonstrated hVEGFC MSC administration post-injury significantly increased the lymphatic contraction frequency 14-, 21-, and 28-days post-surgery compared to the control animals (MSC administration) in vivo, while also reducing tail swelling 28-days post-surgery compared to controls.

Conclusion

Our results suggest a therapeutic potential of hVEGFC MSC in alleviating the lymphatic dysfunction observed during lymphedema progression after secondary injury and could provide a promising approach to enhancing autologous cell therapy for treating lymphedema.

慢病毒在移植骨髓间充质干细胞中过表达VEGFC导致小鼠尾部淋巴水肿模型肿胀消退
背景淋巴系统在受伤、疾病或癌症治疗后的功能障碍可导致淋巴水肿,这是一种无法治愈的衰弱性疾病。尽管有各种物理治疗和手术选择,但大多数治疗都是姑息性的,无法解决导致淋巴水肿进展的潜在淋巴管功能不全。干细胞疗法为治疗各种慢性疾病提供了一种有前景的替代方案,具有广泛的治疗效果,可以减少炎症、纤维化和氧化应激,同时促进淋巴管(LV)再生。具体而言,干细胞移植可促进左心室恢复,重建淋巴循环,从而有可能用于有效的淋巴水肿治疗。除了干细胞外,研究还提出了血管内皮生长因子C(VEGFC)的给药,以促进淋巴管生成并减少淋巴水肿中的肿胀。目的在这里,我们寻求将干细胞治疗和VEGFC给药的好处结合起来,干细胞治疗提供了一种可以对组织环境做出反应的细胞治疗方法,以恢复淋巴引流。材料&;方法具体而言,我们使用慢病毒载体(hVEGFC-MSC)改造间充质干细胞(MSC)以过表达VEGFC,并使用近红外(NIR)成像研究其在改善左心室功能和组织肿胀方面的治疗效果,以及在单LV结扎小鼠尾部淋巴水肿模型中的淋巴再生。结果首先,我们发现使用慢病毒转导的VEGFC过表达导致体外VEGFC蛋白合成增加。然后,我们证明,与体内对照动物(MSC给药)相比,损伤后给予hVEGFC MSC显著增加了手术后14、21和28天的淋巴收缩频率,同时与对照相比,也减少了手术后28天的尾部肿胀。结论hVEGFC-MSC在减轻继发性损伤后淋巴水肿进展过程中观察到的淋巴功能障碍方面具有治疗潜力,可为加强自体细胞治疗淋巴水肿提供一种有前景的方法。
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来源期刊
Microcirculation
Microcirculation 医学-外周血管病
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
4.20%
发文量
43
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal features original contributions that are the result of investigations contributing significant new information relating to the vascular and lymphatic microcirculation addressed at the intact animal, organ, cellular, or molecular level. Papers describe applications of the methods of physiology, biophysics, bioengineering, genetics, cell biology, biochemistry, and molecular biology to problems in microcirculation. Microcirculation also publishes state-of-the-art reviews that address frontier areas or new advances in technology in the fields of microcirculatory disease and function. Specific areas of interest include: Angiogenesis, growth and remodeling; Transport and exchange of gasses and solutes; Rheology and biorheology; Endothelial cell biology and metabolism; Interactions between endothelium, smooth muscle, parenchymal cells, leukocytes and platelets; Regulation of vasomotor tone; and Microvascular structures, imaging and morphometry. Papers also describe innovations in experimental techniques and instrumentation for studying all aspects of microcirculatory structure and function.
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