Center for Vascular Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center Farmington, CT, USA.
Center for Vascular Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center Farmington, CT, USA ; Department of Anesthesiology, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center Lubbock, TX, USA.
Front Physiol. 2014 Jan 9;4:402. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2013.00402. eCollection 2014.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are multipotent, tissue-resident cells that can facilitate tissue regeneration and thus, show great promise as potential therapeutic agents. Functional MSCs have been isolated and characterized from a wide array of adult tissues and are universally identified by the shared expression of a core panel of MSCs markers. One of these markers is the multifunctional cell surface peptidase CD13 that has been shown to be expressed on human and murine MSCs from many tissues. To investigate whether this universal expression indicates a functional role for CD13 in MSC biology we isolated, expanded and characterized MSCs from bone marrow of wild type (WT) and CD13(KO) mice. Characterization of these cells demonstrated that both WT and CD13(KO) MSCs expressed the full complement of MSC markers (CD29, CD44, CD49e, CD105, Sca1), showed comparable proliferation rates and were capable of differentiating toward the adipogenic and osteogenic lineages. However, MSCs lacking CD13 were unable to differentiate into vascular cells, consistent with our previous characterization of CD13 as an angiogenic regulator. Compared to WT MSCs, adhesion and migration on various extracellular matrices of CD13(KO) MSCs were significantly impaired, which correlated with decreased phospho-FAK levels and cytoskeletal alterations. Crosslinking human MSCs with activating CD13 antibodies increased cell adhesion to endothelial monolayers and induced FAK activation in a time dependent manner. In agreement with these in vitro data, intramuscular injection of CD13(KO) MSCs in a model of severe ischemic limb injury resulted in significantly poorer perfusion, decreased ambulation, increased necrosis and impaired vascularization compared to those receiving WT MSCs. This study suggests that CD13 regulates FAK activation to promote MSC adhesion and migration, thus, contributing to MSC-mediated tissue repair. CD13 may present a viable target to enhance the efficacy of mesenchymal stem cell therapies.
间充质干细胞(MSCs)是多能的组织驻留细胞,能够促进组织再生,因此作为潜在的治疗剂具有巨大的应用前景。人们已经从广泛的成年组织中分离和鉴定出功能性 MSCs,并通过共表达一组核心 MSC 标志物来普遍鉴定。这些标志物之一是多功能细胞表面肽酶 CD13,已证明其在来自许多组织的人源和鼠源 MSC 上表达。为了研究这种普遍表达是否表明 CD13 在 MSC 生物学中具有功能作用,我们从野生型(WT)和 CD13(KO)小鼠的骨髓中分离、扩增和鉴定了 MSC。这些细胞的鉴定表明,WT 和 CD13(KO)MSC 均表达 MSC 标志物的完整组合(CD29、CD44、CD49e、CD105、Sca1),增殖率相当,并能够向成脂和成骨谱系分化。然而,缺乏 CD13 的 MSC 无法分化为血管细胞,这与我们之前对 CD13 作为血管生成调节剂的表征一致。与 WT MSC 相比,CD13(KO)MSC 在各种细胞外基质上的粘附和迁移明显受损,这与磷酸化 FAK 水平降低和细胞骨架改变相关。用激活型 CD13 抗体交联人 MSC 可增加细胞对内皮单层的粘附,并以时间依赖性方式诱导 FAK 激活。与这些体外数据一致,在严重缺血肢体损伤模型中,肌肉内注射 CD13(KO)MSC 导致灌注明显较差,运动减少,坏死增加,血管化受损,与接受 WT MSC 的情况相比差异显著。这项研究表明,CD13 通过调节 FAK 激活来促进 MSC 的黏附和迁移,从而有助于 MSC 介导的组织修复。CD13 可能成为一个可行的靶点,以提高间充质干细胞治疗的效果。