Tei Katsumasa, Matsumoto Tomoyuki, Mifune Yutaka, Ishida Kazunari, Sasaki Ken, Shoji Taro, Kubo Seiji, Kawamoto Atsuhiko, Asahara Takayuki, Kurosaka Masahiro, Kuroda Ryosuke
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine 7-5-1, Kusunoki-cho, Chuo-ku, Kobe 650-0017, Japan.
Stem Cells. 2008 Mar;26(3):819-30. doi: 10.1634/stemcells.2007-0671. Epub 2008 Jan 10.
Neoangiogenesis is a key process in the initial phase of ligament healing. Adult human circulating CD34+ cells, an endothelial/hematopoietic progenitor-enriched cell population, have been reported to contribute to neoangiogenesis; however, the therapeutic potential of CD34+ cells for ligament healing is still unclear. Therefore, we performed a series of experiments to test our hypothesis that ligament healing is supported by CD34+ cells via vasculogenesis. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mobilized peripheral blood (GM-PB) CD34+ cells with atelocollagen (CD34+ group), GM-PB mononuclear cells (MNCs) with atelocollagen (MNC group), or atelocollagen alone (control group) was locally transplanted after the creation of medial collateral ligament injury in immunodeficient rats. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and immunohistochemical staining at the injury site demonstrated that molecular and histological expression of human-specific markers for endothelial cells was higher in the CD34+ group compared with the other groups at week 1. Endogenous effect, assessed by capillary density and mRNA expression of vascular endothelial growth factor, was significantly higher in CD34+ cell group than the other groups. In addition to the observation that, as assessed by real-time RT-PCR, gene expression of ligament-specific marker was significantly higher in the CD34+ group than in the other groups, ligament healing assessed by macroscopic, histological, and biomechanical examination was significantly enhanced by CD34+ cell transplantation compared with the other groups. Our data strongly suggest that local transplantation of circulating human CD34+ cells may augment the ligament healing process by promoting a favorable environment through neovascularization.
新生血管形成是韧带愈合初始阶段的关键过程。据报道,成人循环中的CD34+细胞是一种富含内皮/造血祖细胞的细胞群体,有助于新生血管形成;然而,CD34+细胞对韧带愈合的治疗潜力仍不清楚。因此,我们进行了一系列实验来验证我们的假设,即CD34+细胞通过血管生成支持韧带愈合。在免疫缺陷大鼠造成内侧副韧带损伤后,将粒细胞集落刺激因子动员的外周血(GM-PB)CD34+细胞与去端胶原蛋白(CD34+组)、GM-PB单核细胞(MNCs)与去端胶原蛋白(MNC组)或单独的去端胶原蛋白(对照组)进行局部移植。损伤部位的逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)和免疫组织化学染色显示,在第1周时,CD34+组中内皮细胞人特异性标志物的分子和组织学表达高于其他组。通过毛细血管密度和血管内皮生长因子的mRNA表达评估的内源性效应,在CD34+细胞组中显著高于其他组。此外,通过实时RT-PCR评估发现,CD34+组中韧带特异性标志物的基因表达显著高于其他组,与其他组相比,通过宏观、组织学和生物力学检查评估的韧带愈合在CD34+细胞移植后得到显著增强。我们的数据强烈表明,循环人CD34+细胞的局部移植可能通过促进新生血管形成创造有利环境来增强韧带愈合过程。