But why go thru all the trouble of stem
cells if exosomes are the reason for the benefits? Which must be why no
one seems to be monitoring stem cell survival.
Application of stem cell-derived exosomes in ischemic diseases: opportunity and limitations
The latest here:
Nose-to-brain delivery of stem cells in stroke: the role of extracellular vesicles
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Abstract
Stem cell transplantation offers a promising therapy that can be administered days, weeks, or months after a stroke. We recognize 2 major mitigating factors that remain unresolved in cell therapy for stroke, notably: (1) well-defined donor stem cells and (2) mechanism of action. To this end, we advance the use of ProtheraCytes, a population of non-adherent CD34+ cells derived from human peripheral blood and umbilical cord blood, which have been processed under good manufacturing practice, with testing completed in a phase 2 clinical trial in post-acute myocardial infarction (NCT02669810). We also reveal a novel mechanism whereby ProtheraCytes secrete growth factors and extracellular vesicles (EVs) that are associated with angiogenesis and vasculogenesis. Our recent data revealed that intranasal transplantation of ProtheraCytes at 3 days after experimentally induced stroke in adult rats reduced stroke-induced behavioral deficits and histological damage up to 28 days post-stroke. Moreover, we detected upregulation of human CD63+ EVs in the ischemic brains of stroke animals that were transplanted with ProtheraCytes, which correlated with increased levels of DCX-labeled neurogenesis and VEGFR1-associated angiogenesis and vasculogenesis, as well as reduced Iba1-marked inflammation. Altogether, these findings overcome key laboratory-to-clinic translational hurdles, namely the identification of well-characterized, clinical grade ProtheraCytes and the elucidation of a potential CD63+ EV-mediated regenerative mechanism of action. We envision that additional translational studies will guide the development of clinical trials for intranasal ProtheraCytes allografts in stroke patients, with CD63 serving as a critical biomarker.
Stem cells and extracellular vesicles (EVs). The release of CD-63-labeled EVs utilizes the pathway used by high density lipid biogenesis, that is, ApoA-1 cholesterol efflux. CD-63-labeled EVs are lipoprotein structures released from cells that may be enhanced by ApoA-1 involving gene fusion between the transmembrane protein CD-63 and a sequence from ApoA-1. Accordingly, ApoA-1 appears to serve as a receptor to CD63.
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