Frontiers in Oncology (Apr 2023)

CD146+ mural cells from infantile hemangioma display proangiogenic ability and adipogenesis potential in vitro and in xenograft models

  • Jialin Chen,
  • Qianyi Chen,
  • Yajing Qiu,
  • Lei Chang,
  • Zhang Yu,
  • Yuanbo Li,
  • Shih-jen Chang,
  • Zongan Chen,
  • Xiaoxi Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1063673
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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ObjectiveInfantile hemangioma (IH), the most common infantile vascular neoplasm, is uniquely characterized by rapid proliferation followed by slow spontaneous involution lasting for years. In IH lesions, perivascular cells are the most dynamic cell subset during the transition from the proliferation phase to the involution phase, and we aimed to systematically study this kind of cell.Methods and resultsCD146-selective microbeads were used to isolate IH-derived mural-like cells (HemMCs). Mesenchymal markers of HemMCs were detected by flow cytometry, and the multilineage differentiation potential of HemMCs was detected by specific staining after conditioned culture. CD146-selected nonendothelial cells from IH samples showed characteristics of mesenchymal stem cells with distinct angiogenesis-promoting effects detected by transcriptome sequencing. HemMCs spontaneously differentiated into adipocytes 2 weeks after implantation into immunodeficient mice, and almost all HemMCs had differentiated into adipocytes within 4 weeks. HemMCs could not be induced to differentiate into endothelial cells in vitro. However, 2 weeks after implantation in vivo, HemMCs in combination with human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) formed GLUT1+ IH-like blood vessels, which spontaneously involuted into adipose tissue 4 weeks after implantation.ConclusionsIn conclusion, we identified a specific cell subset that not only showed behavior consistent with the evolution of IH but also recapitulated the unique course of IH. Thus, we speculate that proangiogenic HemMCs may be a potential target for the construction of hemangioma animal models and the study of IH pathogenesis.

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