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Mesenchymal stem cells restore lung function by recruiting resident and nonresident proteins

Authors :
Philipp Jungebluth
Augustinus Bader
Paolo Macchiarini
Maximilian von Richthofen
Gustav Steinhoff
Tetsuhiko Go
Kai H. Darsow
Mark Luedde
Victor I. Peinado
Catharina Schreiber
Johannes C. Haag
Mihael Vucur
Elisabet Ferrer
Harald A. Lange
Sebastian Bartel
Tom Luedde
Dario Furlani
Source :
Cell Transplantation, Vol 20 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Because human lungs are unlikely to repair or regenerate beyond the cellular level, cell therapy has not previously been considered for chronic irreversible obstructive lung diseases. To explore whether cell therapy can restore lung function, we administered allogenic intratracheal mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in the trachea of rats with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH), a disease characterized by single or recurrent pulmonary thromboembolic obliteration and progressive pulmonary vascular remodeling. MSCs were retrieved only in high pressure-exposed lungs recruited via a homing stromal derived factor-1α/ CXCR4 pathway. After MSC administration, a marked and long-lasting improvement of all clinical parameters and a significant change of the proteome level were detected. Beside a variation of liver proteome, such as caspase-3, NF-κB, collagen1A1, and α-SMA, we also identified more than 300 resident and nonresident lung proteins [e.g., myosin light chain 3 (P16409) or mitochondrial ATP synthase subunit alpha (P15999)]. These results suggest that cell therapy restores lung function and the therapeutic effects of MSCs may be related to protein-based tissue reconstituting effects.

Details

ISSN :
15553892
Volume :
20
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell transplantation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f25180c12c081103cdd837245a0370e6