Press Release
For more information, visit: http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis
Amy Molnar
(201) 748-8844/8852 (fax)
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Stem Cells From Muscles Can Repair Cartilage
Study Finds Genetically Engineered Muscle-Derived Stem Cells Improved Cartilage
Repair in Rats
Damage to articular cartilage (cartilage covering the ends of bones where
they meet in a joint) frequently occurs due to injury or illness, and can lead
to degenerative disease. Treatments and experimental approaches to repair this
articular cartilage have achieved limited results, but currently there is no
method to fully restore this type of injured cartilage. Tissue engineering
involving the delivery of therapeutic proteins to the injured site is a promising
new approach to repairing articular cartilage. Previous studies have suggested
that muscles contain stem cells that can develop in various ways, including
into cells that lead to the formation of bone. In a study published in the
February 2006 issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism (http://www.interscience.wiley.com/journal/arthritis),
researchers designed a study using muscle-derived stem cells (MDSCs) genetically
engineered with a therapeutic protein in an effort to repair articular cartilage
defects in rats.
Led by Johnny Huard, PhD, director of the Growth and Development Laboratory
at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh and an associate professor in the departments
of Orthopaedic Surgery and Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry and Bioengineering
at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, researchers induced damage
to the knee joints in 36 12-week-old rats and divided them into three groups.
Group 1 was treated with MDSCs embedded in fibrin glue. Group 2 was treated
with MDSCs that had been cultured from 3-week-old rats and genetically engineered
to express bone morphogenetic protein-4 (BMP-4). Group 3, the control group,
was treated with fibrin glue.
The results showed well-integrated repaired tissue in the MDSC-B4 treatment
group 8, 12 and 24 weeks after surgery, while the other two groups did not
show as much improvement initially and by 24 weeks had deteriorated. “This
finding indicates that continuous endogenous BMP-4 supplied by MDSCs genetically
modified to express BMP-4 over an extended period of time can enhance articular
cartilage healing,” the authors state. They note that using fibrin glue enabled
the cells to settle even in narrow clefts and has no adverse effects on cell
viability.
The study also included culturing MDSC and MDSC-B4 in vitro in three different
types of media and found that MDSC-B4 were able to differentiate into chondrogenic
cells (cells that develop into cartilage) depending on the type of medium in
which they grew. The addition of transforming grown factor ß1 (TGFß1) to MDSC-B4
did not enhance chondrogenic differentiation.
The authors conclude that skeletal muscle is a promising source of cells that
can differentiate into cartilage-producing cells. “The MDSCs used here served
as good carriers of a therapeutic gene and enabled the delivery of appropriate
amounts of BMP-4 protein to the injury site,” they state, adding that the improved
repair lasted for 24 weeks following transplantation. Further studies conducted
by the authors (not yet published) have produced similar results. They conclude: “These
findings suggest that BMP-4 gene therapy based on retrovirally transduced MDSCs
is a potential strategy by which to improve articular cartilage healing.”
In an accompanying editorial in the same issue, Mary B. Goldring of the New
England Baptist Bone and Joint Institute and Har vard Medical School in Boston
, MA , notes that although stem cells derived from bone marrow have been extensively
investigated for the repair of cartilage defects, the current study is the
first to investigate using enriched stem cells from muscle. The author states
that the results are encouraging, especially the successful use of fibrin glue
to fill in the defect, and that the study “provides proof-of-principle for
performing MDSC implantation in cartilage of adult humans, since 12-week-old
rats are considered to be young adults.” Although recent studies have suggested
that fatty tissue and tissue lining the space between joints (synovium) might
also be sources of stem cells, obtaining these cells is more invasive than
muscle biopsies. The author also notes that patients could potentially serve
as donors to themselves, since the current study used MDSCs from juvenile rats
and other studies have shown such transplants to be problematic in adults.
She concludes: “Thus, further work is warranted to determine the chondroprogenitor
potential of MDSCs in adult humans and their capacity to form cartilage in
vivo.”
Articles: “Cartilage Repair Using Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 and Muscle-Derived
Stem Cells,” Ryosuke Kuroda, Arvydas Usas, Seiji Kubo, Karin Corsi, Hairong
Peng, Tim Rose, James Cummins, Freddie H. Fu, Johnny Huard, Arthritis & Rheumatism,
February 2006; 54:2; pp. 433-442.
“Are Bone Morphogenetic Proteins Effective Inducers of Cartilage Repair? Ex
Vivo Transduction of Muscle-Derived Stem Cells,” Mary B. Goldring, Arthritis & Rheumatism,
February 2006; 54:2; pp. 387-389.