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Priming of adipose-derived stem cells with curcumin prior to cryopreservation preserves their functional potency: Towards an 'Off-the-shelf' therapy for burns.

Authors :
Azam, Maryam
Ghufran, Hafiz
Tasneem, Saba
Mehmood, Azra
Malik, Kausar
Yousaf, Muhammad Amin
Tarar, Moazzam N.
Akram, Shehla Javed
Riazuddin, Sheikh
Source :
Cryobiology. Mar2023, Vol. 110, p69-78. 10p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Stem cells-based treatment for burn wounds require frozen cells as an off-the-shelf therapy; however, cryopreservation-induced oxidative stress resulted in post-thaw cell death or loss of cell functions, thus arrested their clinical practicality. Although antioxidant priming to stem cells increase their resistant to oxidative stress, but this strategy is still unexplored on cryopreserved cells. Herein, we investigated whether curcumin priming before cryopreservation could preserve the therapeutic potency of thawed stem cells. For this, unprimed and curcumin-primed adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) were cryopreserved for one month. Post-thawing, cells were assessed for viability by trypan blue assay; metabolic activity by MTT assay; senescence by senescence-associated (SA)‐β‐galactosidase activity staining assay; migration by scratch healing assay and; mRNA expression by real-time PCR. Subsequently, the healing potential was examined by injecting cells around the wound periphery of acidic burn in rats. Post-healing, skin architecture was histologically examined. Results demonstrated that, curcumin-primed frozen cells (Cryo/Cur-ASCs) showed better post-thaw viability, metabolic activity, migration ability and lower percent of senescence comparative to unprimed frozen cells (Cryo/ASCs). Curcumin priming alleviated the oxidative damage by activating the ROS-reducing cellular antioxidant system as shown by the evident increase in GSH levels and upregulated mRNA expression of glutathione peroxidase (GPx), superoxide dismutases (SOD1, SOD2), and catalase (CAT). Further, invivo findings revealed that Cryo/Cur-ASCs-treated wounds exhibited earlier wound closure with an improved architecture comparative to Cryo/ASCs and depicted healing capacity almost similar to Fresh/ASCs. Our findings suggested that curcumin priming could be effective to alleviate the cryo-induced oxidative stress in post-thawed cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00112240
Volume :
110
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cryobiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162504410
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cryobiol.2022.12.001