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Omental grafting: a cell-based therapy for blood vessel repair.


ABSTRACT: Clinicians regularly transplant omental pedicles to repair a wide variety of injured tissues, but the basic mechanism underlying this efficacious procedure is not understood. One possibility that has not been addressed is the ability of omentum to directly contribute regenerative cells to injured tissues. We hypothesized that if omental progenitor cells could be mobilized to incorporate into damaged tissue, the power of this therapy would be greatly expanded. Labelled omental grafts were transplanted into a murine carotid artery injury model. Selected grafts were treated with thymosin ?4 (T?4) prior to transplantation to investigate the effects of chemical potentiation on healing. We found treatment of grafts with T?4-induced progenitor cells to fully integrate into the wall of injured vessels and differentiate into vascular smooth muscle. Myographic studies determined that arteries receiving T?4-stimulated grafts were functionally indistinguishable from uninjured controls. Concurrent in vitro analyses showed that T?4 promoted proliferation, migration and trans-differentiation of cells via AKT signalling. This study is the first to demonstrate that omentum can provide progenitor cells for repair, thus revealing a novel and naturally occurring source of vascular smooth muscle for use in cell-based therapies. Furthermore, our data show that this system can be optimized with inducing factors, highlighting a more powerful therapeutic potential than that of its current clinical application. This is a paradigm-setting concept that lays the foundation for the use of chemical genetics to enhance therapeutic outcomes in a myriad of fields.

SUBMITTER: Shelton EL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3672266 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Omental grafting: a cell-based therapy for blood vessel repair.

Shelton Elaine L EL   Poole Stanley D SD   Reese Jeff J   Bader David M DM  

Journal of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine 20120208 6


Clinicians regularly transplant omental pedicles to repair a wide variety of injured tissues, but the basic mechanism underlying this efficacious procedure is not understood. One possibility that has not been addressed is the ability of omentum to directly contribute regenerative cells to injured tissues. We hypothesized that if omental progenitor cells could be mobilized to incorporate into damaged tissue, the power of this therapy would be greatly expanded. Labelled omental grafts were transpl  ...[more]

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