Chronic nicotine impairs the angiogenic capacity of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived endothelial cells in a murine model of peripheral arterial disease

Q3 Medicine
Alex H.P. Chan PhD , Caroline Hu BS , Gladys C.F. Chiang BS , Chisomaga Ekweume BS , Ngan F. Huang PhD
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Abstract

Objective

Lifestyle choices such as tobacco and e-cigarette use are a risk factor for peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and may influence therapeutic outcomes. The effect of chronic nicotine exposure on the angiogenic capacity of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived endothelial cells (iPSC-ECs) was assessed in a murine model of PAD.

Methods

Mice were exposed to nicotine or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 28 days, followed by induction of limb ischemia and iPSC-EC transplantation. Cells were injected into the ischemic limb immediately after induction of hindlimb ischemia and again 7 days later. Limb perfusion was assessed by laser Doppler spectroscopy, and transplant cell survival was monitored for 14 days afterward using bioluminescence imaging, followed by histological analysis of angiogenesis.

Results

Transplant cell retention progressively decreased over time after implantation based on bioluminescence imaging, and there were no significant differences in cell survival between mice with chronic exposure to nicotine or PBS. However, compared with mice without nicotine exposure, mice with prior nicotine exposure had had an impaired therapeutic response to iPSC-EC therapy based on decreased vascular perfusion recovery. Mice with nicotine exposure, followed by cell transplantation, had significantly lower mean perfusion ratio after 14 days (0.47 ± 0.07) compared with mice undergoing cell transplantation without prior nicotine exposure (0.79 ± 0.11). This finding was further supported by histological analysis of capillary density, in which animals with prior nicotine exposure had a lower capillary density (45.9 ± 4.7 per mm2) compared with mice without nicotine exposure (66.5 ± 8.1 per mm2). Importantly, the ischemic limbs mice exposed to nicotine without cell therapy also showed significant impairment in perfusion recovery after 14 days, compared with mice that received PBS + iPSC-EC treatment. This result suggested that mice without chronic nicotine exposure could respond to iPSC-EC implantation into the ischemic limb by inducing perfusion recovery, whereas mice with chronic nicotine exposure did not respond to iPSC-EC therapy.

Conclusions

Together, these findings show that chronic nicotine exposure adversely affects the ability of iPSC-EC therapy to promote vascular perfusion recovery and angiogenesis in a murine PAD model.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

在外周动脉疾病的小鼠模型中,慢性尼古丁损害了人类诱导的多能干细胞衍生的内皮细胞的血管生成能力。
目的:吸烟和电子烟等生活方式的选择是外周动脉疾病(PAD)的风险因素,并可能影响治疗结果。在PAD小鼠模型中评估了慢性尼古丁暴露对人诱导多能干细胞衍生内皮细胞(iPSC EC)血管生成能力的影响。方法:将小鼠暴露于尼古丁或磷酸盐缓冲盐水(PBS)28天,然后诱导肢体缺血和iPSC EC移植。在后肢缺血诱导后立即将细胞注射到缺血肢体中,并在7天后再次注射。通过激光多普勒光谱评估肢体灌注,然后使用生物发光成像监测移植细胞存活14天,然后进行血管生成的组织学分析。结果:根据生物发光成像,植入后移植细胞的保留率随着时间的推移而逐渐降低,长期暴露于尼古丁或PBS的小鼠之间的细胞存活率没有显著差异。然而,与未接触尼古丁的小鼠相比,先前接触过尼古丁的小鼠对iPSC EC治疗的治疗反应受损,这是基于血管灌注恢复的降低。与未接触尼古丁的细胞移植小鼠(0.79±0.11)相比,接触尼古丁后进行细胞移植的小鼠在14天后的平均灌注率(0.47±0.07)显著降低。毛细血管密度的组织学分析进一步支持了这一发现,其中先前接触尼古丁的动物具有比未接触尼古丁的小鼠(66.5±8.1/mm2)更低的毛细管密度(45.9±4.7/mm2)。重要的是,与接受PBS+iPSC EC治疗的小鼠相比,暴露于未经细胞治疗的尼古丁的缺血性肢体小鼠在14天后的灌注恢复也表现出显著损伤。这一结果表明,没有慢性尼古丁暴露的小鼠可以通过诱导灌注恢复对iPSC EC植入缺血肢体产生反应,而慢性尼古丁暴露小鼠对iPSC-EC治疗没有反应。结论:总之,这些发现表明,在小鼠PAD模型中,慢性尼古丁暴露对iPSC EC治疗促进血管灌注恢复和血管生成的能力产生了不利影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
28 weeks
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