Precursor Cells Generated From Human Embryonic Stem Cells Show Ability to Repair Vascular Damage in Animals
New, scalable population of hemangioblast cells halves the death rate following heart attack and repairs ischemic limbs and damaged vasculature
"The ability to repair vascular damage using these cells could have a profound impact on a large number of diseases that are major human afflictions," said Robert Lanza, M.D., Vice President of Research & Scientific Development at ACT, and senior author of the study. "Our results suggest the possibility of using nature's early cellular developmental components to restore vascularization and function in patients with vascular disease. An injection of these cells may be able to prevent a patient from having a leg amputated or from dying after a heart attack."
"We have developed for the first time a simple and highly scalable source of human hemangioblasts," stated Shi-Jiang Lu, Ph.D., Director of Differentiation at ACT and first author of the paper. "These proprietary cells represent a new and distinctly different population of cells that can be differentiated into vascular structures and multiple hematopoietic cell types. The elimination of serum and other animal components from the system, as well as the ability to generate an unlimited supply of these cells, will be important for future preclinical and human studies."
When the cells were injected into animals that had damage to their retina due to diabetes or ischemia-reperfusion injury (lack of adequate blood flow) of the retina, the cells homed to the site of injury and showed robust reparative function of the entire damaged vasculature within 24-48 hours. The cells showed a similar regenerative capacity in animal models of both myocardial infarction (50% reduction in mortality rate) and hind limb ischemia, with restoration of blood flow to near normal levels.
"These cells were able to generate functional blood vessels in the presence of severe tissue injury, as well as in chronic disease states," says Maria Grant, M.D., Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Florida, and an author on the paper. "These cells have a robust vascular reparative ability under what is typically considered very adverse growth conditions making them potentially ideal for treatment of diabetic vascular complications where profound tissue compromise exists and healing is typically severely compromised."
The researchers of the paper from Advanced Cell Technology collaborated with scientists from the University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, and the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC), New York, New York.
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