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The finding of stem/progenitor cells in postnatal bone marrow and umbilical cord blood, opens up a possibility of using stem cells to treat neurologic diseases. There is a controversy, whether intravenously administered human umbilical cord blood cells (HUCBC) migrate to the brain, differentiate and improve recovery after ischemia. In this study, 13 ×106 cells from non-cultured (non-committed) mononuclear HUCBC fraction were intravenously infused 1, 2, 3 or 7 days after a transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAo) in adult rats. We found few human cells only in the ischemic area, localized mostly around blood vessels with few positive cells in the brain parenchyma. Timing of HUCBC delivery after ischemia or injection of Cyclosporin A at the time of delivery, had no effect on the number of human cells detected in the ischemic brain. Infusion of HUCBC did not reduce infarct volume and did not improve neurologic deficits after MCAo, suggesting that HUCBC failed to migrate/survive in the ischemic brain and did not provide significant neurological benefits.
Human umbilical cord blood is frequently used as a source of transplantable hematopoietic cells and more recently as a target of gene therapy - a new approach for treatment of various disorders. The aim of our study was optimisation of the transfection conditions of cord blood-derived CD34+ hematopoietic cells. Mononuclear cells fraction was isolated from cord blood samples by density gradient centrifugation. Subsequently, CD34+ hematopoietic cells were separated on immuno- magnetic MiniMACS columns. Pure population of CD34+ cells was incubated in a se­rum free medium supplemented with thrombopoietin, stem cell factor and Flt-3 ligand for 48 h and then transfected with plasmid DNA carrying the enhanced version of green fluorescent protein (EGFP) as a reporter gene. We studied the influence of vari­ous pulse settings and DNA concentrations on the transfection efficiency, measured by flow cytometry as the fluorescence of target cells due to the expression of EGFP. The optimal settings were as follows: 4 mm cuvette, 1600 iF, 550 V/cm, and 10 ug of DNA per 500 ul. With these settings we obtained a high transfection frequency (41.2%) without a marked decrease of cell viability. An increase of the pulse capaci­tance and/or of DNA concentration resulted in a greater electroporation efficiency, but also in a decrease of cell viability. In conclusion, the results described here allow one to recommend electroporation as an efficient method of gene delivery into CD34+ hematopoietic cells derived from human umbilical cord blood.
Tissue formation and maintenance is regulated by various factors, including biological, physiological and physical signals transmitted between cells as well as originating from cell-substrate interactions. In our study, the osteogenic potential of mesenchymal stromal/stem cells isolated from umbilical cord Wharton's jelly (UC-MSCs) was investigated in relation to the substrate rigidity on polyacrylamide hydrogel (PAAM). Osteogenic differentiation of UC-MSCs was enhanced on stiff substrate compared to soft substrates, illustrating that the mechanical environment can play a role in differentiation of this type of cells. These results show that substrate stiffness can regulate UC-MSCs differentiation, and hence may have significant implications for design of biomaterials with appropriate mechanical properties for regenerative medicine.
SDF-1, a chemokine secreted by injured tissues, may be instrumental in chemoattracting CXCR4+ stem cells (SCs) for repair of infarcted myocardium. We hypothesize that the myocardial SDF-1 expression determines also the engraftment and beneficial effects of SCs transplanted into the infarcted heart. Myocardial infarction (MI) was induced in rats by coronary artery ligation. The animals were either sacrificed at 2, 7, 16, 21 or 28 days after MI or were re-operated at 2, 7 or 14 days after MI to receive SCs transplantation, and were sacrificed 14 days later. SCs transplantation consisted of 3 x 15 µl injections of SCs isolated from foetal rat liver (FLSCs) into the myocardium bordering the infarction zone (5 x 106 cells/heart, labelled with PKH2 Green Fluorescent Cell Linker, ~20% CXCR4+). In the MI border zone, SDF-1 and CXCR4 immunostaining was transiently increased after MI, picking at 2 days and down regulating to the sham level by 21 days after MI. Simultaneously, an increased incorporation of CXCR4+ and CD133+ cells into capillaries was evident. AMD1300, a blocker of CXCR4, prevented the post-MI expression of CXCR4. In the MI border zone, the cardiomyocyte cross-sectional diameter increased and capillary/cardiomyocyte ratio decreased systematically during the 28 post-MI days, while an interstitial collagen accumulation demonstrated transient increase. FLSCs did not survive in the non-infarcted hearts. In infarcted hearts, FLSCs survived best when they were injected at 2 days after MI. The survival was negligible again when the injection was performed at 14 days after MI. FLSCs transplanted at 2 days after MI caused a further rise in SDF-1, CXCR4, and CD133 expression, compared with the untreated infarcted hearts. Only FLSCs transplanted at 2 days, but not later, attenuated cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and increased capillary/cardiomyocyte ratio in the MI border zone. These results suggest that myocardial signalling for homing of the endogenous and the exogenous SCs is transiently activated early after MI, that SDF-1 is instrumental in this process, and that there is only a narrow time-window after MI when SCs transplantation results in their efficient myocardial engraftment and beneficial anti-remodelling effect.
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