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Repeated Systemic Administration of Human Adipose-Derived Stem Cells Attenuates Overt Diabetic Nephropathy in Rats

Authors :
Xiang-fei Liu
Bo Fu
Robert Chunhua Zhao
Xiangmei Chen
Shaoyuan Cui
Kanghua Li
Congjuan Luo
Li Zhang
Diangeng Li
Fei Zhu
Source :
Stem Cells and Development. 22:3074-3086
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2013.

Abstract

Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) can alleviate acute kidney injury and promote kidney cell regeneration and repair. To investigate the role of ASCs in diabetic nephropathy (DN), Sprague-Dawley rats were made diabetic by intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (STZ) after uninephrectomy. After 12 weeks, proteinuria was well established. Five times of 5×10(6) human ASCs repeatedly injected through a tail vein at 4 weekly intervals. A reduction in proteinuria was not observed in diabetic rats until 24 weeks. However, urinary protein excretion was significantly suppressed at 28 weeks and persisted up to 32 weeks after STZ treatment. ASC treatment significantly attenuated glomerulus hypertrophy and tubular interstitial injury, and led to the downregulation of WT-1 and synaptopodin expression. CFSE labeled ASCs were injected into DN rats via the tail vein. Within 24 h after injection, the cells were detected in lung, spleen, and peritubular regions, but rarely in pancreas. Human Alu gene expression was detected in lung and spleen up to 4 weeks after ASCs injection. ASC treatment did not improve hyperglycemia or pancreatic damage. In vitro, recombinant human glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) prevented podocyte injury by high glucose similarly to ASC-conditioned medium. After blocking GDNF in ASC-CM with neutralizing antibody, the therapeutic effect of ASC-CM was significantly decreased. ASCs cocultured with podocytes restored the downregulation of synaptopodin expression, which was weakened by GDNF-RNA interfering. These findings indicate that repeated intravenous ASC can reduce diabetic kidney damage in rats even at the progressive stage, and promote podocyte recovery via GDNF secretion.

Details

ISSN :
15578534 and 15473287
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stem Cells and Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d5f8fabc5700be912bdd78fd57e12a26