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Perivascular Stem Cell-Derived Cyclophilin A Improves Uterine Environment with Asherman’s Syndrome via HIF1α-Dependent Angiogenesis

Authors :
Sang Woo Lyu
Yeon Sun Kim
Hyung Keun Lee
Seung Chel Yang
So Hee Park
Hyunjung Jade Lim
Songmi Noh
Sunghun Na
Hye Ryun Kim
Haengseok Song
Mira Park
Seok-Ho Hong
Source :
Mol Ther
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Asherman's syndrome (AS) is characterized by intrauterine adhesions or fibrosis resulting from scarring inside the endometrium. AS is associated with infertility, recurrent miscarriage, and placental abnormalities. Although mesenchymal stem cells show therapeutic promise for the treatment of AS, the molecular mechanisms underlying its pathophysiology remain unclear. We ascertained that mice with AS, like human patients with AS, suffer from extensive fibrosis, oligo/amenorrhea, and infertility. Human perivascular stem cells (hPVSCs) from umbilical cords repaired uterine damage in mice with AS, regardless of their delivery routes. In mice with AS, embryo implantation is aberrantly deferred, which leads to intrauterine growth restriction followed by no delivery at term. hPVSC administration significantly improved implantation defects and subsequent poor pregnancy outcomes via hypoxia inducible factor 1α (HIF1α)-dependent angiogenesis in a dose-dependent manner. Pharmacologic inhibition of HIF1α activity hindered hPVSC actions on pregnancy outcomes, whereas stabilization of HIF1α activity facilitated such actions. Furthermore, therapeutic effects of hPVSCs were not observed in uterine-specific HIF1α-knockout mice with AS. Secretome analyses of hPVSCs identified cyclophilin-A as the major paracrine factor for hPVSC therapy via HIF1α-dependent angiogenesis. Collectively, we demonstrate that hPVSCs-derived cyclophilin-A facilitates HIF1α-dependent angiogenesis to ameliorate compromised uterine environments in mice with AS, representing the major pathophysiologic features of humans with AS.

Details

ISSN :
15250016
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....87302b3cf54a2c259ab32b882852ca26
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymthe.2020.05.015