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Plasminogen regulates mesenchymal stem cell–mediated tissue repair after ischemia through Cyr61 activation
Hao Duan, … , Yi Fan, Yanqing Gong
Hao Duan, … , Yi Fan, Yanqing Gong
Published August 6, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(15):e131376. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.131376.
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Research Article Vascular biology

Plasminogen regulates mesenchymal stem cell–mediated tissue repair after ischemia through Cyr61 activation

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Abstract

Stem cell transplantation has emerged as a promising strategy in regenerative medicine. However, the poor survival and persistence of the transplanted cells, including mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), in the hostile ischemic microenvironments represents a major therapeutic barrier. Here we report that plasminogen (Plg) stimulated MSC functions and promoted MSC survival during tissue repair after ischemia. Genetic Plg ablation abolished MSC survival, migration, and proliferation in mouse ischemic limbs, and abrogated MSC-mediated blood reperfusion, neovascularization, and tissue repair after ischemia, suggesting a critical role for Plg in MSC-mediated tissue repair. Furthermore, multiplex cytokine array analysis identified that Plg cleaved and activated cysteine-rich protein 61 (Cyr61), an ECM-associated growth factor, to stimulate MSC survival and migration. Overexpression with truncated Cyr61 in MSCs rescued blood reperfusion after hind limb ischemia in Plg-deficient mice. Finally, Plg-mediated Cyr61 cleavage promoted endothelial cell migration and neovascularization in vitro and in vivo. Our study reveals that Plg promotes MSC survival, persistence, and paracrine effects and improves postischemic neovascularization and tissue repair through Cyr61 cleavage and activation. Thus, targeting Plg/Cyr61 may offer exciting therapeutic opportunities for strengthening MSC therapy in ischemic diseases.

Authors

Hao Duan, Zhenqiang He, Maohuan Lin, Yanling Wang, Fan Yang, R. Alan Mitteer, Hyun-Jun Kim, Eujing Yeo, Hongyu Han, Ling Qin, Yi Fan, Yanqing Gong

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Figure 4

Plg is required for blood vessel formation mediated by MSC in ischemic tissues.

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Plg is required for blood vessel formation mediated by MSC in ischemic t...
HI was induced in Plg+/+ and Plg−/− mice by ligation of the femoral artery, followed by MSC transplantation or saline injection in the ischemic limbs. MSCs were harvested from Col2-Cre Rosa26-LSL-tdTomato mice. Gastrocnemius muscle in ischemic limbs was collected at day 7 after HI surgery. Tissue sections were probed with (A) anti-CD31 antibody, (B) anti-tdTomato and anti–NG-2 antibodies, or (C) anti-tdTomato and anti–α-SMA antibodies, followed by immunofluorescence imaging. (A) Left, representative images. Right, quantitative analysis of CD31+ area for mice treated with MSCs (n = 3, mean ± SEM). Statistical analysis by unpaired Student’s t test. (B and C) Representative images of ischemic tissues from MSC-treated mice are shown. Original magnification, ×100.

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