Plasmatic Membrane Expression of Adhesion Molecules in Human Cardiac Progenitor/Stem Cells Might Explain Their Superior Cell Engraftment after Cell Transplantation.

Autores de CIPF
Participantes ajenos a CIPF
- Palacios I
- Panadero J
- Sánchez B
- López-Cerdán A
- Castellano D
- Rodríguez-Borlado L
- Bernad A
Grupos de Investigación
Abstract
Human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) and cardiac progenitor/stem cells (CPCs) have been extensively studied as a potential therapeutic treatment for myocardial infarction (MI). Previous reports suggest that lower doses of CPCs are needed to improve cardiac function relative to their bone marrow counterparts. Here, we confirmed this observations and investigated the surface protein expression profile that might explain this effect. Myocardial infarction was performed in nude rats by permanent ligation of the left coronary artery. Cardiac function and infarct size before and after cell transplantation were evaluated by echocardiography and morphometry, respectively. The CPC and BM-MSC receptome were analyzed by proteomic analysis of biotin-labeled surface proteins. Rats transplanted with CPCs showed a greater improvement in cardiac function after MI than those transplanted with BM-MSCs, and this was associated with a smaller infarct size. Analysis of the receptome of CPCs and BM-MSCs showed that gene ontology biological processes and KEGG pathways associated with adhesion mechanisms were upregulated in CPCs compared with BM-MSCs. Moreover, the membrane protein interactome in CPCs showed a strong relationship with biological processes related to cell adhesion whereas the BM-MSCs interactome was more related to immune regulation processes. We conclude that the stronger capacity of CPCs over BM-MSCs to engraft in the infarcted area is likely linked to a more pronounced cell adhesion expression program.
Datos de la publicación
- ISSN/ISSNe:
- 1687-966X, 1687-9678
- Tipo:
- Article
- Páginas:
- 8872009-8872009
- DOI:
- 10.1155/2020/8872009
- PubMed:
- 33101423
Stem Cells International HINDAWI LTD
Citas Recibidas en Web of Science: 4
Documentos
- No hay documentos
Filiaciones
Proyectos asociados
DifGenOmics. Estudio de las diferencias de sexo y género en salud con abordajes ómicos
Investigador Principal: FRANCISCO GARCÍA GARCÍA
CONSELLERIA DE EDUCACION . 2020
PID10470. No se ingresará dinero en el CIPF. La ayuda consiste en un estudio genómico (long & read-sequencing) para 25 muestras.
Investigador Principal: CARMEN ESPINÓS ARMERO
EASI- Genomics . 2020