Stem Cell Research (Jan 2014)

Nanofiber-expanded human umbilical cord blood-derived CD34+ cell therapy accelerates murine cutaneous wound closure by attenuating pro-inflammatory factors and secreting IL-10

  • Suman Kanji,
  • Manjusri Das,
  • Reeva Aggarwal,
  • Jingwei Lu,
  • Matthew Joseph,
  • Sujit Basu,
  • Vincent J. Pompili,
  • Hiranmoy Das

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scr.2013.11.005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 275 – 288

Abstract

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Nanofiber-expanded human umbilical cord blood-derived CD34+ cell therapy is under consideration for treating peripheral and cardiac ischemia. However, the therapeutic efficacy of nanofiber-expanded human umbilical cord blood-derived (NEHUCB) CD34+ cell therapy for wound healing and its mechanisms are yet to be established. Using an excision wound model in NOD/SCID mice, we show herein that NEHUCB-CD34+ cells home to the wound site and significantly accelerate the wound-healing process compared to vehicle-treated control. Histological analysis reveals that accelerated wound closure is associated with the re-epithelialization and increased angiogenesis. Additionally, NEHUCB-CD34+ cell-therapy decreases expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6 and NOS2A in the wound bed, and concomitantly increases expression of IL-10 compared to vehicle-treated control. These findings were recapitulated in vitro using primary dermal fibroblasts and NEHUCB-CD34+ cells. Moreover, NEHUCB-CD34+ cells attenuate NF-κB activation and nuclear translocation in dermal fibroblasts through enhanced secretion of IL-10, which is known to bind to NF-κB and suppress transcriptional activity. Collectively, these data provide novel mechanistic evidence of NEHUCB-CD34+ cell-mediated accelerated wound healing.