Cardiosphere-Derived Cells Require Endoglin for Paracrine-Mediated Angiogenesis

Stem Cell Reports
Rachael E RedgraveHelen M Arthur

Abstract

Clinical trials of stem cell therapy to treat ischemic heart disease primarily use heterogeneous stem cell populations. Small benefits occur via paracrine mechanisms that include stimulating angiogenesis, and increased understanding of these mechanisms would help to improve patient outcomes. Cardiosphere-derived-cells (CDCs) are an example of these heterogeneous stem cell populations, cultured from cardiac tissue. CDCs express endoglin, a co-receptor that binds specific transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) family ligands, including bone morphogenetic protein 9 (BMP9). In endothelial cells endoglin regulates angiogenic responses, and we therefore hypothesized that endoglin is required to promote the paracrine pro-angiogenic properties of CDCs. Cre/LoxP technology was used to genetically manipulate endoglin expression in CDCs, and we found that the pro-angiogenic properties of the CDC secretome are endoglin dependent both in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, BMP9 pre-treatment of endoglin-depleted CDCs restores their pro-angiogenic paracrine properties. As BMP9 signaling is normally required to maintain endoglin expression, we propose that media containing BMP9 could be critical for therapeutic CDC preparation.

Citations

Feb 10, 2019·The EMBO Journal·Rhys AndersonJoão F Passos
Nov 18, 2017·Angiogenesis·Jillian W AndrejecskJohannes J Mager
Dec 30, 2020·Gene Expression Patterns : GEP·E SinghH M Arthur
Apr 30, 2021·FASEB Journal : Official Publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology·Sarah A MarshHelen M Arthur
Aug 28, 2021·International Journal of Molecular Sciences·Nina P JordanSimi Ali

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Methods Mentioned

BETA
biopsies
fluorescence-activated cell sorting
Assay
PCR

Software Mentioned

ImageJ
GraphPad Prism
FACSDiva
NeuronJ
ImageQuant TL
Ascent

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