Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
Department of Ophthalmology and.
JCI Insight. 2019 Nov 1;4(21):129224. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.129224.
Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a disorder of the developing retina of preterm infants. ROP can lead to blindness because of abnormal angiogenesis that is the result of suspended vascular development and vaso-obliteration leading to severe retinal stress and hypoxia. We tested the hypothesis that the use of the human progenitor cell combination, bone marrow-derived CD34+ cells and vascular wall-derived endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs), would synergistically protect the developing retinal vasculature in a mouse model of ROP, called oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR). CD34+ cells alone, ECFCs alone, or the combination thereof were injected intravitreally at either P5 or P12 and pups were euthanized at P17. Retinas from OIR mice injected with ECFCs or the combined treatment revealed formation of the deep vascular plexus (DVP) while still in hyperoxia, with normal-appearing connections between the superficial vascular plexus (SVP) and the DVP. In addition, the combination of cells completely prevented aberrant retinal neovascularization and was more effective anatomically and functionally at rescuing the ischemia phenotype than either cell type alone. We show that the beneficial effects of the cell combination are the result of their ability to orchestrate an acceleration of vascular development and more rapid ensheathment of pericytes on the developing vessels. Lastly, our proteomic and transcriptomic data sets reveal pathways altered by the dual cell therapy, including many involved in neuroretinal maintenance, and principal component analysis (PCA) showed that cell therapy restored OIR retinas to a state that was closely associated with age-matched normal retinas. Together, these data herein support the use of dual cell therapy as a promising preventive treatment for the development of ROP in premature infants.
早产儿视网膜病变(ROP)是一种早产儿未成熟视网膜的疾病。ROP 可导致失明,因为异常血管生成是血管发育暂停和血管闭塞的结果,导致严重的视网膜应激和缺氧。我们检验了这样一个假设,即使用人类祖细胞组合,骨髓源性 CD34+细胞和血管壁源性内皮集落形成细胞(ECFCs),将在一种称为氧诱导性视网膜病变(OIR)的 ROP 小鼠模型中协同保护发育中的视网膜血管。在 P5 或 P12 时单独注射 CD34+细胞、ECFCs 或两者的组合,然后在 P17 时处死幼鼠。用 ECFCs 或联合治疗注射的 OIR 小鼠的视网膜在仍处于高氧状态时显示出深层血管丛(DVP)的形成,并且在 SVP 和 DVP 之间存在正常的连接。此外,细胞联合治疗完全阻止了异常的视网膜新生血管形成,并且在解剖和功能上比单独使用任何一种细胞类型更有效地挽救了缺血表型。我们表明,细胞联合的有益效果是其协调加速血管发育和更快地包裹发育中的血管周细胞的能力的结果。最后,我们的蛋白质组学和转录组学数据集揭示了双重细胞治疗改变的途径,包括许多与神经视网膜维持有关的途径,主成分分析(PCA)表明细胞治疗将 OIR 视网膜恢复到与年龄匹配的正常视网膜密切相关的状态。总之,这些数据支持使用双重细胞治疗作为预防早产儿 ROP 发展的有前途的治疗方法。