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Exogenous bone marrow derived-putative endothelial progenitor cells attenuate ischemia reperfusion-induced vascular injury and renal fibrosis in mice dependent on pericytes
Author(s) -
Meng Wang,
Huzi Xu,
Yinzheng Li,
Chujin Cao,
Han Zhu,
Yuxi Wang,
Zhi Zhao,
Guangchang Pei,
Fan Zhu,
Qian Yang,
Xuan Deng,
Cheng Zhou,
Yi Guo,
Jianzhong Wu,
Wei Liao,
Juan Yang,
Ying Yao,
Rui Zeng
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
theranostics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.689
H-Index - 97
ISSN - 1838-7640
DOI - 10.7150/thno.48562
Subject(s) - ischemia , bone marrow , progenitor cell , fibrosis , medicine , renal ischemia , reperfusion injury , pathology , cancer research , stem cell , biology , microbiology and biotechnology
Rationale: Capillaries are composed of endothelial cells and the surrounding mural cells, pericytes. Microvascular repair after injury involves not only the proliferation of endothelial cells but also pericyte-based vessel stabilization. Exogenous bone marrow derived-putative endothelial progenitor cells (b-pEPCs) have the potential for vascular repair; however, their effect on vascular structure stabilization and pericyte-related pathobiological outcomes in the injured kidney has not been fully examined. Methods: We applied ischemia-reperfusion (IR) to induce renal vascular injury and renal fibrosis in mice. Platelet-derived growth factor receptor β (PDGFR-β)-DTR-positive mice were generated to deplete pericytes, and exogenous b-pEPCs and the PDGFR-β ligand, PDGF chain B (PDGF-BB), were employed to explore the relationship among b-pEPCs, pericytes, vascular repair, and early renal fibrosis. Results: Administration of b-pEPCs reduced IR-induced pericyte-endothelial detachment, pericyte proliferation, and myofibroblast transition via a paracrine mode, which preserved not only vascular stabilization but also ameliorated IR-initiated renal fibrosis. PDGF-BB upregulated the expression of PDGFR-β, exacerbated vascular abnormality, and pericyte-myofibroblast transition, which were ameliorated by b-pEPCs administration. The exogenous b-pEPCs and their culture medium (CM) induced vascular injury protection, and renal fibrosis was blocked by selective deletion of pericytes. Conclusion: Exogenous b-pEPCs directly protect against IR-induced vascular injury and prevent renal fibrosis by inhibiting the activation of PDGFR-β-positive pericytes.

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