Nature 414, 173-179 (2001) This Article described patterns of labelling observed in olfactory cortex when a transneuronal tracer was co-expressed with single odorant receptor genes in the mouse olfactory epithelium. During efforts to replicate and extend this work, we have been unable to reproduce the reported findings. Moreover, we have found inconsistencies between some of the figures and data published in the paper and the original data. We have therefore lost confidence in the reported conclusions. We regret any adverse consequences that may have resulted from the paper's publication.
Hemorrhagic shock (HS) and trauma is currently the leading cause of death in young adults worldwide. Morbidity and mortality after HS and trauma is often the result of multi-organ failure such as acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), conditions with few therapeutic options. Bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are a multipotent stem cell population that has shown therapeutic promise in numerous pre-clinical and clinical models of disease. In this paper, in vitro studies with pulmonary endothelial cells (PECs) reveal that conditioned media (CM) from MSCs and MSC-PEC co-cultures inhibits PEC permeability by preserving adherens junctions (VE-cadherin and β-catenin). Leukocyte adhesion and adhesion molecule expression (VCAM-1 and ICAM-1) are inhibited in PECs treated with CM from MSC-PEC co-cultures. Further support for the modulatory effects of MSCs on pulmonary endothelial function and inflammation is demonstrated in our in vivo studies on HS in the rat. In a rat “fixed volume” model of mild HS, we show that MSCs administered IV potently inhibit systemic levels of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in the serum of treated animals. In vivo MSCs also inhibit pulmonary endothelial permeability and lung edema with concurrent preservation of the vascular endothelial barrier proteins: VE-cadherin, Claudin-1, and Occludin-1. Leukocyte infiltrates (CD68 and MPO positive cells) are also decreased in lungs with MSC treatment. Taken together, these data suggest that MSCs, acting directly and through soluble factors, are potent stabilizers of the vascular endothelium and inflammation. These data are the first to demonstrate the therapeutic potential of MSCs in HS and have implications for the potential use of MSCs as a cellular therapy in HS-induced lung injury.
Recent investigation has shown an interaction between transplanted progenitor cells and resident splenocytes leading to modulation of the immunologic response in neurological injury. We hypothesize that the intravenous injection of multipotent adult progenitor cells (MAPC) confers neurovascular protection after traumatic brain injury through an interaction with resident splenocytes, subsequently leading to preservation of the blood brain barrier. Four groups of rats underwent controlled cortical impact injury (3 groups) or sham injury (1 group). MAPC were injected via the tail vein at two doses (2*106 MAPC/kg or 10*106 MAPC/kg) 2 and 24 hours after injury. Blood brain barrier permeability was assessed by measuring Evans blue dye extravasation (n=6/group). Additionally, splenic mass was measured (n=12/group) followed by splenocyte characterization (n=9/group) including: cell cycle analysis (n=6/group), apoptosis index (n=6/group), cell proliferation (n=6/group), and inflammatory cytokine measurements (n=6/group). Vascular architecture was determined by immunohistochemistry (n=3/group). Traumatic brain injury results in a decrease in splenic mass and increased blood brain barrier permeability. Intravenous infusion of MAPC preserved splenic mass and returned blood brain barrier permeability towards control sham injured levels. Splenocyte characterization indicated an increase in the number and proliferative rate of CD4+ T cells as well as an increase in IL-4 and IL-10 production in stimulated splenocytes isolated from the MAPC treatment groups. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated stabilization of the vascular architecture in the peri-lesion area Traumatic brain injury causes a reduction in splenic mass that correlates with an increase in circulating immune cells leading to increased blood brain barrier permeability. The intravenous injection of MAPC preserves splenic mass and the integrity of the blood brain barrier. Furthermore, the co-localization of transplanted MAPC and resident CD4+ splenocytes is associated with a global increase in IL-4 and IL-10 production and stabilization of the cerebral microvasculature tight junction proteins.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MCSs) have been shown to have therapeutic potential in multiple disease states associated with vascular instability including traumatic brain injury (TBI). In the present study, Tissue Inhibitor of Matrix Metalloproteinase-3 (TIMP3) is identified as the soluble factor produced by MSCs that can recapitulate the beneficial effects of MSCs on endothelial function and blood brain barrier (BBB) compromise in TBI. Attenuation of TIMP3 expression in MSCs completely abrogates the effect of MSCs on BBB permeability and stability, while intravenous administration of rTIMP3 alone can inhibit BBB permeability in TBI. Our results demonstrate that MSCs increase circulating levels of soluble TIMP3, which inhibits VEGF-A induced breakdown of endothelial AJs in vitro and in vivo. These findings elucidate a clear molecular mechanism for the effects of MSCs on the BBB in TBI, and directly demonstrate a role for TIMP3 in regulation of BBB integrity.
The barrier formed by endothelial cells (ECs) plays an important role in tissue homeostasis by restricting passage of circulating molecules and inflammatory cells. Disruption of the endothelial barrier in pathologic conditions often leads to uncontrolled inflammation and tissue damage. An important component of this barrier is adherens junctions, which restrict paracellular permeability. The transmembrane protein vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin and its cytoplasmic binding partner b-catenin are major components of functional adherens junctions. We show that mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) significantly reduce endothelial permeability in cocultured human umbilical vascular endothelial cells (HUVECs) and following exposure to vascular endothelial growth factor, a potent barrier permeability-enhancing agent. When grown in cocultures with HUVECs, MSCs increased VE-cadherin levels and enhanced recruitment of both VE-cadherin and b-catenin to the plasma membrane. Enhanced membrane localization of b-catenin was associated with a decrease in b-catenin-driven gene transcription. Disruption of the VE-cadherin=b-catenin interaction by overexpressing a truncated VE-cadherin lacking the b-catenin interacting domain blocked the permeability-stabilizing effect of MSCs. Interestingly, a conditioned medium from HUVEC-MSC cocultures, but not from HUVEC or MSC cells cultured alone, significantly reduced endothelial permeability. In addition, intravenous administration of MSCs to brain-injured rodents reduced injury-induced enhanced blood-brain barrier permeability. Similar to the effect on in vitro cultures, this stabilizing effect on blood-brain barrier function was associated with increased expression of VEcadherin. Taken together, these results identify a putative mechanism by which MSCs can modulate vascular EC permeability. Further, our results suggest that the mediator(s) of these vascular protective effects is a secreted factor(s) released as a result of direct MSC-EC interaction.
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