Functioning human blood vessels
grown in mice from adult progenitor cells
For the first time, researchers have successfully grown
functional human blood vessels in mice using cells from adult human donors -an
important step in developing clinical strategies to grow tissue, researchers report
in Circulation Research: Journal of the American Heart Association.
"What's really significant about our study is that we
are using human cells that can be obtained from blood or bone marrow rather than
removing and using fully developed blood vessels," said Joyce Bischoff, Ph.D.,
senior author of the study and associate professor at Harvard Medical School and
Children's Hospital Boston.
The researchers combined two different types of progenitor
cells in a culture dish of nutrients and growth factors, then washed off the nutrients
and implanted the cells into mice with weakened immune systems. Once implanted,
the progenitor cell mixture grew and differentiated into a small ball of healthy
blood vessels.
In the study, researchers used two different kinds of
progenitor cells to grow blood vessels: the endothelial progenitor cells and mesenchymal
progenitor cells. Progenitor cells are similar to stem cells but can only differentiate
into specific cells, while stem cells can differentiate into practically any cell
in the body.
The researchers used different combinations of the two
types of progenitor cells. They found that a mixture of adult blood- and adult
bone marrow-derived progenitor cells or a combination of umbilical cord blood-derived
and adult bone marrow-derived cells resulted in the greatest density of new blood
vessel formation.
The ability to rapidly grow two-layered blood vessels
without using embryonic or umbilical cord blood stem cells could skirt many ethical
concerns, Bischoff said. It would also solve a persistent problem in treating
several medical conditions that result from ischemia such as heart attacks, wound
healing and many acute injuries.
"What we are most interested in right now is speeding
up the vascularization (the formation of blood vessels)," Bischoff said. "We see
very good and extensive vasculature in seven days and we'd like to see that in
24 or 48 hours. If you have an ischemic tissue, it's dying tissue, so the faster
you can establish blood flow the better."
If researchers can develop ways to speed the growth of
the vessels, non-surgical cardiac bypass procedures could potentially grow new
vessels around those blocked by atherosclerosis.
Bischoff said other findings include:
- The cells created a vigorous network of vessels that connected to one another
and to the vessels of the host mouse within seven days and continued to transport
blood during the four-week study.
- Once combined and implanted, the two progenitor cells arranged themselves
into vessels with minimal outside help, i.e., without any genetic alteration or
manipulation to improve their growth. This is important because many growth-promoting
genes are the same genes that become activated in cancer.
The research could also enhance tissue engineering of
new organs for later implantation into patients, another medical research field
that needs good sources of microvascularization to develop, Bischoff said.
Co-authors are Juan M. Melero-Martin, Ph.D., lead author;
Maria E. De Obaldia, A.B.; Soo-Young Kang, Ph.D.; Zia A. Khan, Ph.D.; Lei Yuan,
Ph.D.; and Peter Oettgen, M.D.
The U.S. Army funded the research.
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