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Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1α Potentiates Jagged 1-Mediated Angiogenesis by Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Derived Exosomes.

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TLDR
Exosomes derived from MSCs stably overexpressing HIF‐1α have an increased angiogenic capacity in part via an increase in the packaging of Jagged1, which could have potential applications for the treatment of ischemia‐related disease.
Abstract
Insufficient vessel growth associated with ischemia remains an unresolved issue in vascular medicine. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been shown to promote angiogenesis via a mechanism that is potentiated by hypoxia. Overexpression of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1α in MSCs improves their therapeutic potential by inducing angiogenesis in transplanted tissues. Here, we studied the contribution of exosomes released by HIF-1α-overexpressing donor MSCs (HIF-MSC) to angiogenesis by endothelial cells. Exosome secretion was enhanced in HIF-MSC. Omics analysis of miRNAs and proteins incorporated into exosomes pointed to the Notch pathway as a candidate mediator of exosome communication. Interestingly, we found that Jagged1 was the sole Notch ligand packaged into MSC exosomes and was more abundant in HIF-MSC than in MSC controls. The addition of Jagged1-containing exosomes from MSC and HIF-MSC cultures to endothelial cells triggered transcriptional changes in Notch target genes and induced angiogenesis in an in vitro model of capillary-like tube formation, and both processes were stimulated by HIF-1α. Finally, subcutaneous injection of Jagged 1-containing exosomes from MSC and HIF-MSC cultures in the Matrigel plug assay induced angiogenesis in vivo, which was more robust when they were derived from HIF-MSC cultures. All Jagged1-mediated effects could be blocked by prior incubation of exosomes with an anti-Jagged 1 antibody. All together, the results indicate that exosomes derived from MSCs stably overexpressing HIF-1α have an increased angiogenic capacity in part via an increase in the packaging of Jagged1, which could have potential applications for the treatment of ischemia-related disease. Stem Cells 2017;35:1747-1759.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Exosomes: Basic Biology and Technological Advancements Suggesting Their Potential as Ischemic Heart Disease Therapeutics.

TL;DR: Exosome biogenesis and emerging evidence of exosome-mediated regenerative cell-to-cell communications are described and possibilities of using exosomes to treat ischemic heart disease are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraoperative delivery of the Notch ligand Jagged-1 regenerates appendicular and craniofacial bone defects.

TL;DR: It is concluded that Jagged-1 is a bone-anabolic agent with therapeutic potential for regenerating traumatic or congenital bone defects and could pave the way for safer and more efficient therapies to repair bone damage due to injury or inherited bone diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Extracellular Vesicle-Mediated Immune Regulation of Tissue Remodeling and Angiogenesis After Myocardial Infarction.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that small EVs may become a useful tool for cell-free myocardial infarction therapy is proposed, based on current small EVs engineering strategies allow delivery of specific content to selected cell types, thus revealing the singular properties of these vesicles for myocardIAL ischemia treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hypoxia-Activated PI3K/Akt Inhibits Oxidative Stress via the Regulation of Reactive Oxygen Species in Human Dental Pulp Cells.

TL;DR: The data show that the PI3K/Akt pathway is activated in response to hypoxia and inhibits oxidative stress in a ROS-dependent manner, and redox-mediated hypoxic preconditioning regulatory mechanisms that may be significant for tissue regeneration are identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Triggering Endogenous Cardiac Repair and Regeneration via Extracellular Vesicle-Mediated Communication

TL;DR: The role of EV in both regulating cardiac homeostasis and driving heart regeneration and their role in providing cardio-protection and enhancing cardiac repair mechanisms are addressed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Notch Signaling: Cell Fate Control and Signal Integration in Development

TL;DR: Notch signaling defines an evolutionarily ancient cell interaction mechanism, which plays a fundamental role in metazoan development, providing a general developmental tool to influence organ formation and morphogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation and Characterization of Exosomes from Cell Culture Supernatants and Biological Fluids

TL;DR: This unit describes different approaches for exosome purification from various sources, and discusses methods to evaluate the purity and homogeneity of the purified exosomes preparations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Membrane vesicles as conveyors of immune responses

TL;DR: The role of membrane vesicles, in particular exosomes, in the communication between immune cells, and between tumour and immune cells is focused on.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tumour exosome integrins determine organotropic metastasis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that exosomes from mouse and human lung-, liver- and brain-tropic tumour cells fuse preferentially with resident cells at their predicted destination, namely lung fibroblasts and epithelial cells, liver Kupffer cells and brain endothelial cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Concise review: mesenchymal stem/multipotent stromal cells: the state of transdifferentiation and modes of tissue repair--current views.

TL;DR: Critically evaluate the literature describing the plasticity of MSCs and offer insight into how the molecular and functional heterogeneity of this cell population, which reflects the complexity of marrow stroma as an organ system, may confound interpretation of their transdifferentiation potential.
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