Generating Abundant Functional Blood Vessel Cells from Human Stem Cells
By LabMedica International staff writers
Posted on 12 Feb 2010
In a significant step toward restoring healthy blood circulation to treat a variety of diseases, a team of scientists has developed a new technique and mechanism for turning human embryonic and pluripotent stem cells into plentiful, functional endothelial cells, which are essential to the formation of blood vessels. Posted on 12 Feb 2010
Endothelial cells form the interior "lining” of all blood vessels and are the main component of capillaries, the smallest and most abundant vessels. In the near future, the researchers believe, it will be possible to inject these cells into humans to heal damaged organs and tissues. The new approach allows scientists to generate virtually unlimited quantities of durable endothelial cells--more than 40-fold the quantity possible with earlier approaches. Based on insights into the genetic mechanisms that regulate how embryonic stem cells form vascular endothelial cells, the applications may also yield new ways to study genetically inherited vascular diseases. The study appears in January 2010 in the advance online issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology.
"This technique is the first of its kind with serious potential as a treatment for a diverse array of diseases, especially cardiovascular disease, stroke, and vascular complications of diabetes,” stated Dr. Shahin Rafii, from Weill Cornell Medical College (New York, NY, USA), and the study's senior author. Dr. Rafii is the Arthur B. Belfer Professor in Genetic Medicine and codirector of the Ansary Stem Cell Institute at Weill Cornell Medical College.
Recently, great hopes have been pinned on stem cells as the source of future cures and treatments. Undeniably, human embryonic stem cells have the potential to become any one of the more than 200 types of adult cells. However, the factors and pathways that govern their differentiation to abundant derivatives that could be used to repair organs have remained poorly understood.
A major hurdle for Dr. Rafii's lab has been to improve their understanding, and therefore, control, of the differentiation process (how stem cells transform to various cell types), and then to generate enough vascular endothelial cells, many millions, so they can be used therapeutically. To meet this challenge, the scientists first screened for molecular factors that come into play when stem cells turn into endothelial cells. Their findings led them to a strategy that considerably enhances the efficiency of producing these cells.
Then, the researchers tracked the differentiation process in real-time using a green fluorescent protein marker developed by Dr. Daylon James, the study's first author and assistant research professor in the department of reproductive of medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College. They found that when they exposed stem cells to a compound that blocks tumor growth factor-beta (TGF)-beta (a growth factor involved in cell specialization) at just the right time during cell culturing, the propagation of endothelial cells dramatically increased.
Even more amazing, the investigators found that the cells worked properly when injected into mice. The cells were quickly assimilated into the animals' circulatory systems, and functioned alongside normal vasculature.
To achieve long-lasting clinical benefits, there remain additional hurdles to exploiting endothelial cells generated in vitro. A fundamental prerequisite to using vascular cells in regenerative medicine has been the proper assembly in vivo of new blood vessels from stem-cell-derived cells, according to Dr. Sina Rabbany, who is an adjunct professor at Weill Cornell Medical College. Dr. Rabbany emphasized that, in addition to manipulating biologic factors implicated in endothelial cell differentiation, the impact of blood flow on endothelial cells is crucial to engineering durable, vascularized organs. With the abundant supply of endothelial cells that the new methods provide, Dr. Rabbany's team is working to build biologic scaffolds that model the microenvironment of the vasculature, so that the vessels they generate will be functional and long lasting in patients.
Another major obstacle to clinical use of cultured endothelial cells is the potential of immune rejection when the cells are injected into a patient. To address this risk, one approach would be to create a large, genetically diverse bank of human embryonic stem cells that, on demand, could be converted into endothelial cells that are compatible with specific patients.
"Given the success rate our group has shown in generating human embryonic stem cells from donated normal and diseased embryos, this new approach has broad implications not only for regenerative medicine, but also for the study of genetic diseases of the vasculature,” noted Dr. Zev Rosenwaks, who is director and physician-in-chief of the Ronald O. Perelman and Claudia Cohen Center for Reproductive Medicine as well as the director of the Tri-Institutional Stem Cell Initiative Derivation Unit at Weill Cornell Medical College.
The new endothelial cell culture is currently being validated in ongoing research at Weill Cornell using a number of stem cell lines, or "families” of stem cells. "Employing a highly sophisticated derivation technology, we have been able to generate 11 normal and diseased human embryonic cell lines from discarded embryos at the Tri-Institute Derivation Unit at Weill Cornell,” stated Dr. Nikica Zaninovic, an assistant professor at the Department of Reproductive of Medicine who is spearheading the human embryonic stem cell derivation effort. Using the new differentiation methods, several of these new embryonic stem cell lines have been turned into vascular cells.
Testing in humans is the next major step in verifying the ability of this breakthrough cell-based approach to restore blood supply to injured organs. Armed with this new technology and under the umbrella of support from the Ansary Stem Cell Institute and Tri-Institutional Stem Cell Initiative (Tri-SCI), this team of scientists is hoping to transfer their methods to the clinic within the next five years.
The current study provides insights on the generation of human embryonic vasculature in ways that have not previously been feasible due to obstacles associated with the use of human embryonic tissue. As Dr. James explained, "The unbiased screening technique we used is a major technological advance that opens up possibilities for discovery of how human embryonic stem cells morph into the specific mature cells that compose the brain, liver, pancreas, and so on. Our general approach can be applied to additional human tissues and help other stem cell research groups develop and maintain specialized cell types in the larger effort to understand human development--and to heal many different kinds of human diseases and injuries.”
The Ansary Stem Cell Institute, established at Weill Cornell Medical College in 2004 brings together a team of scientists to focus on stem cells--the primitive, unspecialized cells with an unrivaled capacity to form all types of cells, tissues, and organs in the body. Scientists at the Institute hope to discover the wellspring of adult stem cells in the body and ways to manipulate them to treat human illness. In particular, they hope to understand the regulation of cells that give rise to such essential components as blood vessels, insulin-producing cells in the pancreas (which are damaged in diabetic patients), and neurons of the brain and nervous system.
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