Stem Cell Institute Public Seminar on Adult Stem Cell Therapy Clinical Trials in New York City May 17th, 2014

New York, NY (PRWEB) April 09, 2014

The Stem Cell Institute, located in Panama City, Panama, will present an informational umbilical cord stem cell therapy seminar on Saturday, May 17, 2014 in New York City at the New York Hilton Midtown from 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm.

Speakers include:

Neil Riordan PhD“Clinical Trials: Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy for Autism and Spinal Cord Injury”

Dr. Riordan is the founder of the Stem Cell Institute and Medistem Panama Inc.

Jorge Paz-Rodriguez MD“Stem Cell Therapy for Autoimmune Disease: MS, Rheumatoid Arthritis and Lupus”

Dr. Paz is the Medical Director at the Stem Cell Institute. He practiced internal medicine in the United States for over a decade before joining the Stem Cell Institute in Panama.

Light snacks will be served afterwards. Our speakers and stem cell therapy patients will also be on hand to share their personal experiences and answer questions.

Admission is free but space in limited and registration is required. For venue information and to register and reserve your tickets today, please visit: http://www.eventbrite.com/e/stem-cell-institute-seminar-tickets-11115112601 or call Cindy Cunningham, Patient Events Coordinator, at 1 (800) 980-7836.

About Stem Cell Institute Panama
Founded in 2007 on the principles of providing unbiased, scientifically sound treatment options; the Stem Cell Institute (SCI) has matured into the world’s leading adult stem cell therapy and research center. In close collaboration with universities and physicians world-wide, our comprehensive stem cell treatment protocols employ well-targeted combinations of autologous bone marrow stem cells, autologous adipose stem cells, and donor human umbilical cord stem cells to treat: multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, heart disease, and autoimmune diseases.

In partnership with Translational Biosciences, a subsidiary of Medistem Panama, SCI provides clinical services for ongoing clinical trials that are assessing safety and signs of efficacy for osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and multiple sclerosis using allogeneic umbilical cord tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hUC-MSC), autologous stromal vascular fraction (SVF) and hU-MSC-derived mesenchymal trophic factors (MTF). In 2014, Translation Biosciences expects to expand its clinical trial portfolio to include spinal cord injury, heart disease, autism and cerebral palsy.

To-date, SCI has treated over 2000 patients.

For more information on stem cell therapy:

Stem Cell Institute Website: https://www.celllmedicine.com

Stem Cell Institute
Via Israel & Calle 66
Plaza Pacific Office #2A
Panama City, Panama

About Medistem Panama Inc.
Since opening its doors in 2007, Medistem Panama Inc. has developed adult stem cell-based products from human umbilical cord tissue and blood, adipose (fat) tissue and bone marrow. Medistem operates an 8000 sq. ft. ISO 9001-certified laboratory in the prestigious City of Knowledge. The laboratory is fully licensed by the Panamanian Ministry of Health and features 3 class 10000 clean rooms, class 100 laminar flow hoods, and class 100 incubators.

Medistem Panama Inc.
Ciudad del Saber, Edif. 221 / Clayton
Panama, Rep. of Panama

Phone: +507 306-2601
Fax: +507 306-2601

About Translational Biosciences
A subsidiary of Medistem Panama Inc., Translational Biosciences was founded solely to conduct clinical trials using adult stem cells and adult stem cell-derived products.

Translational Biosciences webSite: http://www.translationalbiosciences.com

Email: trials(at)translationalbiosciences(dot)com

VIDEO – The Science of Mesenchymal Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine – Arnold Caplan PhD (Part 6)

In part 6, Prof. Caplan discusses Trophic properties of mesenchymal stem cells; MSCs for heart disease; MSCs homing to heart injury site and also to skin incision site; MSCs limit left ventricular thinning following infarction; Trophic properties of MSCs: anti-apoptotic, anti-fibrotic, anti-scarring, angiogenic, mitotic; phase 1 data for allogeneic MSCs show fewer arrhythmias, prompt heart rate recovery, and improved lung function; autologous adipose tissue-derived stromal vascular fraction for treatment of chronic heart disease; Active mesenchymal stem cell clinical trials around the world; Induction therapy with autologous MSCs in kidney transplants; MSCs can coax neural stem cells to become oligodendrocytes, curing mice with MS using allogeneic human MSCs.

The dual effect of MSCs on tumour growth and tumour angiogenesis

Michelle Kéramidas, Florence de Fraipont, Anastassia Karageorgis, Anaïck Moisan, Virginie Persoons, Marie-Jeanne Richard, Jean-Luc Coll and Claire Rome

Abstract (provisional)
Introduction

Understanding the multiple biological functions played by human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) as well as their development as therapeutics in regenerative medicine or in cancer treatment are major fields of research. Indeed, it has been established that hMSCs play a central role in the pathogenesis and progression of tumours, but their impact on tumour growth remains controversial.

Our results suggest that hMSCs injection decreased solid tumour growth in mice and modified tumour vasculature, which confirms hMSCs could be interesting to use for the treatment of pre-established tumours.

Methods

In this study, we investigated the influence of hMSCs on the growth of pre-established tumours. We engrafted nude mice with luciferase-positive mouse adenocarcinoma cells (TSA-Luc+) to obtain subcutaneous or lung tumours. When tumour presence was confirmed by non-invasive bioluminescence imaging, hMSCs were injected into the periphery of the SC tumours or delivered by systemic intravenous injection in mice bearing either SC tumours or lung metastasis.

Results

Regardless of the tumour model and mode of hMSC injection, hMSC administration was always associated with decreased tumour growth due to an inhibition of tumour cell proliferation, likely resulting from deep modifications of the tumour angiogenesis. Indeed, we established that although hMSCs can induce the formation of new blood vessels in a non-tumoural cellulose sponge model in mice, they do not modify the overall amount of haemoglobin delivered into the SC tumours or lung metastasis. We observed that these tumour vessels were reduced in number but were longer.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that hMSCs injection decreased solid tumour growth in mice and modified tumour vasculature, which confirms hMSCs could be interesting to use for the treatment of pre-established tumours.

Original Link: http://stemcellres.com/content/4/2/41/abstract

Autologous bone marrow-derived cell therapy combined with physical therapy induces functional improvement in chronic spinal cord injury patients

Cell Transplant. 2013 Feb 26. [Epub ahead of print]

El-Kheir WA, Gabr H, Awad MR, Ghannam O, Barakat Y, Farghali HA, Maadawi ZM, Ewes I, Sabaawy HE.

Abstract

Spinal cord injuries (SCI) cause sensory loss and motor paralysis and are treated with physical therapy, but most patients fail to recover due to limited neural regeneration. Here we describe a strategy in which treatment with autologous adherent bone marrow cells is combined with physical therapy to improve motor and sensory functions in early-stage chronic SCI patients

In a phase I/II controlled single-blind clinical trial (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT00816803), 70 chronic cervical and thoracic SCI patients with injury durations of at least 6 months were treated with either intrathecal injection(s) of autologous adherent bone marrow cells combined with physical therapy, or with physical therapy alone. Patients were evaluated with clinical examinations, electrophysiological somatosensory evoked potential, MRI imaging, and functional independence measurements.

Chronic cervical and thoracic SCI patients treated with autologous adherent bone marrow cells combined with physical therapy showed functional improvements over patients in the control group treated with physical therapy alone, and there were no cell therapy-related side effects. At 18 months posttreatment, 23 of the 50 cell therapy-treated cases (46 percent) showed sustained improvement using the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale (AIS). Compared to those patients with cervical injuries, a higher rate of functional improvement was achieved in thoracic SCI patients with shorter durations of injury and smaller cord lesions.

Therefore, when combined with physical therapy, autologous adherent bone marrow cell therapy appears to be a safe and promising therapy for patients with chronic spinal cord injuries. Randomized controlled multicenter trials are warranted.

Allogeneic and autogolous stem cell therapy combined with physical rehabilitation: A case report on a chronically injured man with quadriplegia

Allogeneic and autogolous stem cell therapy combined with physical rehabilitation - A case report on a chronically injured man with quadriplegia

Daniel Leonard in Panama

This is a research paper written by Rebecca Johnston, Daniel Leonard’s sister. She recently graduated from a Physical Therapy degree program, and wrote her Capstone paper about Daniel’s stem cell therapy treatment in Panama.

Daniel is presented anonymously in the paper, but Rebecca and Daniel have given their permission for this paper to be shared. Daniel’s ASIA scores (pre and post treatment) are in the appendix of this paper.

 

Allogeneic and autogolous stem cell therapy combined with physical rehabilitation: A case report on a chronically injured man with quadriplegia

Abstract:

Background and Purpose: Stem cell therapy for SCI is a potentially promising treatment with increasing interest. This case report describes the use of a particular stem cell therapy protocol for a patient with chronic spinal cord injury, and describes his subsequent therapy and outcomes.

Case Description: The patient is a 29-year-old male who is chronically injured from a cervical spinal injury, resulting in quadriplegia. The patient was treated with a combined protocol of intrathecal (IT) and intravaneous (IV) allogeneic MSC and CD34+ cells and IT autologous BMMC at 6 ½ years post-injury. The results track the patient’s physical therapy progress until 6 months following stem cell treatment.

Outcomes: Recovery of strength in upper extremity and lower extremity muscle groups was noted, along with a functional increase in grip strength, ability to ambulate with assistance, and a significant decrease in daily medications.
Discussion: This case supports further investigation into treatment of chronically injured SCI patients with stem cell therapy followed by physical therapy.

Manuscript word count: 4321

A few highlights:

“After the patient underwent the stem cell treatment and returned to outpatient physical therapy in his hometown clinic in the United States, his MMT scores were tested over the period of 5 months post-stem cell treatment…. The patient did not decrease in strength in any of the muscles tested, and experienced improvements in 6/13 upper extremity muscle groups, and 8/9 lower extremity muscle groups.”

“The patient also had an increase in grip strength. His grip strength was measured by his occupational therapist to be 5 lbs on the right and 25 lbs on the left at one month before his stem cell treatment. Six months later, his grip strength was measured to be 22 lbs on the right and 36 lbs on the left. The patient reported that this increase in grip strength led to functional improvements, such as being able to self-catheterize, which he was completely unable to do since his injury.”

“The patient was also able to ambulate for the first time in 5 years at approximately 4 months after finishing his treatment. He was able to ambulate in partial weight bearing with the harness and max assist of two for 40 yards at .5 MPH.”


The original post on Daniel Leonard’s blog can be found here.

Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Regenerative Medicine:Mechanisms of action, sources, and delivery options

Neil Riordan, PhD, Founder of the Stem Cell Institute in Panama City, Panama will be speaking today, Wednesday, Feb 6 at the STEMSO International Stem Cell Society 2013 Conference in Fort Lauderdale, FL.

The topic of Dr. Riordan’s discussion will be “Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Regenerative Medicine:Mechanisms of action, sources, and delivery options”

The theme for this year’s event is “Autologous Stem Cells: Who gets to decide…”

Multiple Sclerosis Radio – “Stem cells are your body’s natural healing mechanism” – Neil Riordan PhD

For anyone who missed Dr. Riordan’s talk on MS Radio yesterday, below is a link to the replay. Did you know that by age 30, 96% of the mesenchymal stem cells are gone from a person’s bone marrow? Why is MS a disease of the immune system? How can an automated machine analyze a sample of lecithin and buffer that contains no cells and show that it contains 10 million cells per ml? Tune in for these and more.

REPLAY: “Stem cells are your body’s natural healing mechanism” – Neil Riordan PhD

TODAY ON MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS RADIO!
Dr. Neil Riordan, Founder of Stem Cell Institute
Tuesday Feb 5, 2013 at 2 pm EST.

LISTEN ONLINE: Multiple Sclerosis Radio

or call in Join Us LIVE On Air
(347) 327-9317
or Toll-Free
(877) 497-9936

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/msradio/2013/02/05/stem-cells-your-bodys-natural-healing-mechanism-stem-kine-1

Liposuction method can adversely affect adipose tissue-derived stem cell yield and growth

Adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cell yield and growth characteristics are affected by the tissue-harvesting procedure which was published in Cytotherapy (vol. 8 issue 2, 2006, pages 166-177)states that:

“Ultrasound-assisted liposuction resulted in a lower frequency of proliferating adult stem cells, as well as a longer population doubling time of adult stem cells, compared with resection…”

Those seeking adipose stem cell therapy should ask their doctor if he or she is using ultrasound assisted liposuction to collect the fat sample.

*Stem Cell Institute does not use ultrasound assisted liposuction.

Adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cell yield and growth characteristics are affected by the tissue-harvesting procedure
M.J. Oedayrajsingh-Varma1, S.M. van Ham2, M. Knippenberg3, M.N. Helder4, J. Klein-Nulend3, T.E. Schouten5, M.J.P.F. Ritt1, F.J. van Milligen, PhD5,

1 Department of Plastic Reconstructive and Hand Surgery, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
2 Department of Immunopathology, Sanquin Research at CLB, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
3 Department of Oral Cell Biology, ACTA-Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
4 Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
5 Department of Pathology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14653240600621125, How to Cite or Link Using DOI
Permissions & Reprints

Patients beware: “Point of care” fat stem cell separation and counting kits inaccurate and not US FDA approved for humans.

An informative paper by Mary Pat Moyer, PhD detailing why “same-day” fat stem cell kits that are becoming more common in doctors’ offices across the US can miscount “stem cells” by large factors leading to over estimation of stem cell counts by as much as 20 times or more.

It also states, “no complete harvest and cell isolation systems have been approved by the FDA for autologous SVF harvest for immediate use [in humans].” These are just a couple of the arguments presented that demonstrate why it’s important to process adipose tissue properly in a professional lab setting.

Morrison DG, Hunt DA, Garza I, Johnson RA, Moyer MP*. Counting and Processing Methods Impact Accuracy of Adipose Stem Cell Doses. BioProcess J, 2012; 11(4): 4-17.

Could Metabolic Syndrome, Lipodystrophy, and Aging Be Mesenchymal Stem Cell Exhaustion Syndromes?

Eduardo Mansilla,1,* Vanina Díaz Aquino,1 Daniel Zambón,2 Gustavo Horacio Marin,1 Karina Mártire,1 Gustavo Roque,1 Thomas Ichim,3 Neil H. Riordan,3 Amit Patel,4 Flavio Sturla,5 Gustavo Larsen,6, 7 Rubén Spretz,6, 7 Luis Núñez,8, 9 Carlos Soratti,10 Ricardo Ibar,10 Michiel van Leeuwen,11 José María Tau,1 Hugo Drago,5 and Alberto Maceira1

Abstract
One of the most important and complex diseases of modern society is metabolic syndrome. This syndrome has not been completely understood, and therefore an effective treatment is not available yet. We propose a possible stem cell mechanism involved in the development of metabolic syndrome. This way of thinking lets us consider also other significant pathologies that could have similar etiopathogenic pathways, like lipodystrophic syndromes, progeria, and aging. All these clinical situations could be the consequence of a progressive and persistent stem cell exhaustion syndrome (SCES). The main outcome of this SCES would be an irreversible loss of the effective regenerative mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) pools. In this way, the normal repairing capacities of the organism could become inefficient. Our point of view could open the possibility for a new strategy of treatment in metabolic syndrome, lipodystrophic syndromes, progeria, and even aging: stem cell therapies.

1. Introduction
Metabolic syndrome is recognized today as one of the most important causes of morbidity and mortality in the modern world [1, 2]. Metabolic syndrome is characterized by a variety of symptoms such as obesity with abundant visceral fat, dyslipidemia, carbon hydrates intolerance, insulin resistance and eventually type 2 diabetes, development of arterial hypertension, fat liver disease, sleep apnea, and atherosclerosis with high incidence of myocardial infarction and stroke [3–5]. Although many and different preventive and pharmacological strategies have been applied during the last two decades, the mortality rate of metabolic syndrome continues to be unacceptably high [6, 7]. Then, the central point to consider would be that its critical physiopathogenic pathway has not been discovered yet. As a consequence, it has not been possible so far to design the most appropriate and definitive treatment for it. In this context, it is essential to generate a new framework that could explain the main mechanism of this syndrome development and persistence, allowing then to an effective and enduring cure.

2. The Cellular Perspective
We propose to consider all these issues from a cellular perspective, which could open a pioneering vision for the interpretation and treatment of complex clinical situations such as metabolic syndrome, between many others. It is not generally known that metabolic syndrome is linked to lipodystrophies as much as to obesity [8, 9]. Congenital lipodystrophies (Berardinelli Seip syndrome, Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy, and Dunnigan-type familial partial lipodystrophy) and acquired lipodystrophies (HIV-associated lipodystrophy, cachexia associated with neoplasias, among others) are characterized indeed by the loss of adipose tissue and also by insulin resistance, fat liver disease, dyslipidemia with hypertriglyceridemia, and many other manifestations of the metabolic syndrome [10–12] (Figure 1). In lipodystrophies, there is a continuous and severe loss of adipocytes by apoptosis leading to an inadequate metabolism of free fatty acids, generating severe organic consequences like lipotoxicity, which are closely related to development of metabolic syndrome [13, 14]. On the other hand, in obesity, there is also cellular damage but mainly produced by lipotoxicity, directly related to an excessive ingestion of calories and fats from the diet and by an overwhelmed system incapable of properly metabolizing them [15]. In this situation, hypertrophy and/or hyperproliferation of adipocytes would be the only physiological alleviating mechanism only for a short period of time [16]. Metabolic syndrome, lipodystrophies, and even progeria and aging could be more accurately explained by cellular mechanisms rather than by molecular and biochemical ones.

Figure 1. Lipodistrophic Syndromes

3. The Emergence of Adipocytes and the Perpetuation of Fat
The adipose tissue comprises one of the largest organs in the body. Even lean adult men and women have at least 3.0–4.5kg of adipose tissue, and in individuals with severe obesity, adipose tissue can constitute 45kg or more of body weight. The adipose organ is complex, with multiple depots of white adipose tissue involved in energy storage, hormone (adipokine) production, and local tissue architecture, as well as small depots of brown adipose tissue, required for energy expenditure to create heat (nonshivering thermogenesis) [17]. The potential to acquire new fat cells appears to be a permanent phenomenon in both animals and humans, before or after birth [18]. Therefore, proliferative adipocyte precursor cells must stand as ready to respond to increased demand for energy storage [19]. How adipocytes (fat cells) develop and where their progenitors come from, and for how long and under which circumstances they can provide sufficient support for more fat to be formed while maybe participating in other body functions, is a fundamental biological question with important ramifications for human health and disease. An increase in fat mass associated with obesity could only result from recruitment and differentiation of adipocyte progenitor cells. Despite the recognition of distinct progenitor populations in adipose tissue, it has been assumed that all white adipocytes and their progenitors arise solely from cells of mesenchymal origin [20]. Accumulating evidence suggests that adipocyte progenitors could proceed from bone marrow cells of mesenchymal lineage [21, 22]. Visceral adipose tissue associated with Metabolic Syndrome is a chemotactic niche, whereby mesenchymal stem cells can home to and differentiate into adipocytes to perpetuate its tissue formation [20]. The intertwined epidemics of obesity and diabetes demands an improved understanding of adipocytes and its progenitor cell biology. Adipose tissue mass can expand throughout adult life. Mesenchymal stem cells with a multilineage potential have been isolated from human adipose tissue. Their adipocyte differentiation has been thoroughly studied, and differentiated cells exhibit the unique feature of human adipocytes [22]. One paradigm supports the notion that adipocytes arise from mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) by a sequential pathway of differentiation. When triggered by appropriate developmental cues, MSCs become committed to the adipocyte lineage. A better knowledge of MSC’s differentiation pathways will surely allow the design of new therapeutic strategies for reconstruction of damaged tissues and for the control or prevention of risks associated with obesity in humans [17, 23, 24]. This process can be divided into two related steps: (1) determination, when multipotent mesenchymal stem cells commit to preadipocytes (these cells exhibit similar morphology compared to stem cells, but they are committed to the adipogenic lineage and are no longer able to transform into osteoblasts, myocytes, or chondrocytes and (2) differentiation, when preadipocytes become mature fat cells. This mechanism is tightly regulated at a molecular level by several transcription factors. Several members of the MAPKinases, bone morphogenic proteins, wingless-type MMTV integration site (Wnt) proteins, hedgehogs, delta/jagged proteins, fibroblastic growth factors, insulin, insulin-like growth factors, and transcriptional regulators of adipocyte and osteoblast differentiation including peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma and runt-related transcription factor 2 (Runx2) families have been shown to modify the steps of adipogenesis [23]. Despite the well-documented differences in the metabolic and biochemical properties among anatomically distinct depots of fat, the visceral fat contains adult mesenchymal stem cells with developmental potential similar to those isolated from subcutaneous fat in humans [21]. Thus, adipose precursors cells consist of fibroblast mesenchymal like multipotential stem cells generally termed adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) and exhibit preadipocyte characteristics. They can be isolated, propagated in vitro, and induced to differentiate into adipocytes [25–27]. The adipose vasculature appears to function as a progenitor niche and may provide signals for adipocyte development. Stromal-vascular cells of adipose tissue are adipose precursor and its differentiation in vitro correspond to the sequence: adipoblast (unipotential cells), commitment preadipose cell (preadipocyte), terminal differentiation immature adipose cell, and terminal differentiation mature adipose cell (adipocyte) [28]. Also bone marrow progenitor- (BMP-) derived adipohematopoietic cells via the myeloid lineage have been mentioned as the adipocyte progenitors cells. In any way, these BMP-derived adipocytes could accumulate with age and occur in higher numbers in visceral than in subcutaneous fat, and in female versus male mice. BMP-derived adipocytes may, therefore, account in part for adipose depot heterogeneity and detrimental changes in adipose metabolism and inflammation with aging and adiposity [29]. The development of obesity not only depends on the balance between food intake and caloric utilization but also on the balance between white adipose tissue (WAT), which is the primary site of energy storage, and brown adipose tissue (BAT), which is specialized for energy expenditure. Considerable evidence now supports the view that BAT and WAT are distinct organs. In addition, some sites of white fat storage in the body are more closely linked than others to the metabolic complications of obesity, such as diabetes. White areas contain a variable amount of brown adipocytes, and their number varies with age, strain, and environmental conditions. Recent data have stressed the plasticity of the adipose organ in adult animals. Indeed, under peculiar conditions fully differentiated, white adipocytes can transdifferentiate into brown adipocytes, and vice versa. The ability of the adipose organ to interconvert its main cytotypes in order to meet changing metabolic needs is highly pertinent to the physiopathology of obesity and related to therapeutic strategies. The differentiation between white adipocyte and brown adipocyte lineages occurs in the earliest steps of the fetal development, and both phenotypes are acquired independently [30–33]. Fetal mesenchymal stem cells (fMSCs) can differentiate into brown and white adipocytes. The expression of key adipocyte regulators and markers during differentiation is similar to that in other human and murine adipocyte models, including induction of PPARγ2 and FABP4. The preadipocyte marker, Pref-1, is induced early in differentiation and then declines markedly as the process continues, suggesting that fMSCs first acquire preadipocyte characteristics as they commit to the adipogenic lineage, prior to their differentiation into mature adipocytes. After adipogenic induction, some stem cell isolates differentiated into cells resembling brown adipocytes and others into white adipocytes. Importantly, these cells exhibited elevated basal UCP-1 expression. Thus, fMSCs represent a useful in vitro model for human adipogenesis and provide opportunities to study the stages prior to commitment to the adipocyte lineage. They also offer invaluable insights into the characteristics of human brown fat [34].

4. The Stem Cell Exhaustion Syndrome
In order to self-repair, living organisms have stem cells in central and peripheral locations which can be attracted to sites of injured tissues by “alarm signals” [35]. In this way, these cells proliferate, migrate, and accumulate in those damaged sites [36]. If this situation of “alarm” perpetuates, stem cells could be permanently exhausted from their original locations leading to irreversible disease (Figure 2). Basically, it could be a matter of stem cell quantity and effective availability mainly related to production and consumption in a certain time point when active regeneration is needed. The expected consequences of this situation could be the lack of an appropriate number of stem cells for further tissue replacement and regeneration and eventually the development of disease and aging. It is not completely clear yet if there could be a possible established, coordinated network or a dynamic connection as well as a biological equilibrium between all of these locations. This could finally lead to a constant traffic and exchange of stem cells among all of them in order to provide a perfect mechanism of stem cell provision and replenishment for normal repairment and the perpetuation of complex living organisms on Earth. Although there is not a definitive evidence for a possible alteration of this dynamic, involving an abnormal stem cell depletion kinetic mechanism, it could be interesting to hypothesize about these cell pathways that could open a new era of understanding of disease and therapeutics. For example, we could think that any alteration of this stem cell homeostasis by constant and repetitive trauma, physical hyperactivity, and chronic disease could provoke a persistent disequilibrium inside all these reserve locations. This could promote an irreversible and premature stem cell exhaustion syndrome (SCES), being impossible then for the organism to self-repair and survive.

Figure 2. Stem Cell Exhaustion Syndrome Hypothesis

5. MSCs: The Exhausted Stem Cell?
Tissue and organ damage is constantly taking place in living organisms as a consequence of life itself, diseases, and trauma [37]. A decrease in the endogenous pools of progenitor cells, such as CD34 stem cells and endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs), has been demonstrated to contribute and accelerate the course of cardiovascular disease seen in metabolic syndrome. Several experimental studies have indicated a relevant contribution of these progenitor cells in reendothelization at sites of endothelial injury and in neovascularization at sites of ischaemia. The extent of the EPC pool negatively correlates with cumulative indexes of cardiovascular event risk, such as the Framingham risk score, and multiple risk factors act synergically in reducing EPC, increasing the risk for cardiovascular disease [38–40]. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are probably the most important specialized repairing cells [41, 42]. MSCs are adult stem cells with the capacity and potential of differentiation towards multiple tissue lineages such as adipose, bone, muscle, cartilage, skin, nervous system, and endothelium between many others [43, 44]. They can produce a large variety of growth factors, and they have immunomodulatory properties that allow them to avoid the immune rejection response when transplanted intra- and even interspecies [45, 46]. Although they reside mainly in the bone marrow (BM) and share with hematopoietic stem cells a similar microenvironment, they are phenotypically very different to them [47, 48]. Also, during the last few years, it has been possible to isolate them from many other sites, like dental pulp, endometrium, peripheral blood, umbilical cord, adipose tissue, and even amniotic fluid [49, 50]. Recent studies have also obtained MSCs from vascular vessels, being proposed that they could be found in the perivascular space throughout the whole body [51]. We will refer to all these precise anatomical locations where MSCs are stored as “MSCs pools,” being the bone marrow the central MSCs pool and the others the peripheral ones (Figure 3). In these pools, MSCs usually stay in a quiescent and undifferentiated state until they are called to proliferate and mobilize by “alarm signals” such as proinflammatory cytokines like INF-α and IL-6 among others and many growth factors like GM-CSF [52–54]. Then, it is possible to think that because of the supercaloric food intake of obese patients with metabolic syndrome, a high degree of proinflammatory substances could be produced and released in different microenvironments, specially the abdominal visceral fat one [55]. This could only lead to the perpetuation of this inflammatory state with a constant emission of “alarm signals,” proliferation, mobilization, and finally an endless sequestration of MSCs into the visceral fat depot [56]. Recently, a research group has found evidence of this adipotaxis phenomenon in an animal model, where the MSCs of the BM migrated attracted to the fat depot by TNF-Alfa [57]. This mechanism could give support to the idea of an abnormal migration of MSCs, in patients with metabolic syndrome, leading at some point to the mentioned irreversible impairment of tissue repairment (Figure 4).

6. MSCs Exhaustion and Aging
Metabolic syndrome incidence increases with the advancement of age [58, 59]. Human aging is another example of organ and tissue deterioration that could have a stem cell deficiency, very similar to that observed in metabolic syndrome. The classical human model of premature aging is the Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria syndrome (HGPS) [60, 61]. Progeria manifestations start at 18 months of age approximately, with alopecia, skeletal defects, distinctive facial appearance, and lipodystrophy [62, 63]. These patients also develop dyslipidemia and arterial hypertension [64]. Almost all of them have atherosclerosis as well as cardio and cerebrovascular disease by 13 years of age with premature death [65]. Progeria is produced by a mutation in the gene that codes for the protein of nuclear membrane Lamin A [66]. This mutation makes MSCs sensitive to apoptosis [67]. This issue could explain why many tissues of mesenchymal origin are specially affected in these patients [68]. HGPS is a pathology of segmental nature, in which the different tissues and organs exposed to a variety of different conditions such as mechanical stress are affected differently [69]. Tissues with different turnover rates would require a different number of stem cells for replacement. For example, hair and muscle cells should need to be replenished by MSCs more frequently than central nervous system ones [70]. In patients with progeria, stem cells are at least in principle irreversible damaged, suffering from early apoptosis [71]. Young peripheral tissues, especially those in continuous turnover, are probably more restricted of new replacing stem cells. In this way, progeria patients usually suffer as it was said from alopecia, vascular damage, and premature death by myocardial infarction or stroke [72, 73]. On the other hand, tissues with a slower turnover rate, such as central nervous system, suffer less notorious and more prolonged deterioration. Their pathology is not seen at all in progeria patients as they do not live long enough to be able to evidence damage of these tissues [74, 75]. An excessive cell turnover without the possibility of a concomitant cell replenishment mechanism, could lead to a slow but progressive deterioration usually seen in living organisms and known as “normal ageing” [76]. From this perspective, all these phenomena could be very similar to those observed in metabolic syndrome, lipodystrophic syndromes, and progeria. There is evidence that TNF-alfa progressively increases with age in adipose tissue which also rearranges itself and becomes dysfunctional with an inadequate response to insulin and increased production of cytokines [77]. This de novo proinflammatory generated environment is followed by a highly sensitive state of adipocytes to lipotoxicity [78] and a possible sequestration of a large number of MSCs especially from the BM central pool, which at the same time becomes progressively exhausted with the passing of time. “Normal aged” BM can be seen infiltrated by fat depots with a very reduced number of MSCs, having the significance of this phenomenon still unknown to date [79] (Figure 5). In other words, all these clinical situations could be explained by a stem cell exhaustion syndrome (SCES) causing an impaired regenerative potential.

7. The New Paradigm: Cell Therapy
Stem cell restoration has already demonstrated therapeutic activities in certain systems. For example, it is known that after a stroke, endogenous stem cells are mobilized from the bone marrow in an attempt to heal the damaged neural tissue. Most interestingly, a recent study demonstrated that stroke patients who exhibit a high level of stem cell mobilization have better functional outcomes as opposed to patients with a lower mobilization [80]. Restoration of stem cell function has been studied in aging, in which senescent endothelium can be replaced by the addition of young endothelial progenitor cells. In animal models, this has been shown to “reverse” endothelial aging [81]. In patients administered GM-CSF in order to mobilize autologous bone marrow stem cells, improvements in endothelial function, as demonstrated by increased responsiveness of flow, have also been proven [82]. More “natural” means of mobilizing stem cells into the periphery include the use of food supplements. It has been reported that administration of “StemEnhance,” a commercially available food supplement made from cyanobacterium Aphanizomenon flos-aquae, induces a transient 18% increase in circulating CD34 cells over the period of one hour after consumption [83]. Another commercially available food supplement, “Stem-Kine,” has been demonstrated to induce a 50–100% increase of CD34 and endothelial progenitor cells in circulation for the observation period of over 2 weeks [84]. Given that similar increases in circulating stem cells have been associated with “health-inducing” activities such as exercise [85] and smoking cessation [86], it may be rationale to examine therapeutic effects of these supplements using functional endpoints. One critical point to consider is whether mobilization would accelerate exhaustion of stem cells in the bone marrow compartment. Given expression of telomerase in the bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells and its ability to be modulated by nutritional [87] and antioxidant interventions [88], it appears that this problem may be at least theoretically addressed. If a stem cell depletion kinetic abnormality (MSCs exhaustion syndrome) is true, then a stem cell therapy approach could be feasible. For instance, ex vivo expansion and reinfusion of MSCs from the patient’s own or from allogeneic donors, as evidence shows that MSCs are not immunogenic at all [44], have been already tested in many clinical trials for different pathologies [89–93]. In the best case scenario, MSCs therapy could retard the onset of irreversible lesions associated with metabolic syndrome or at least partially improve those already present in the organism. Also, the development of bioartificial implants such as in the way of a fat transplant (autologous, allogeneic, or even xenogeneic) could be envisioned [94–96]. This could be an innovative way to provide a new pool of MSCs to the patients [17, 97]; a permanent fat transplant such as the one proposed here could also be enriched with ex vivo expanded MSCs, or even those previously made differentiated into brown adipocytes, becoming in this way an immune privileged niche for the cotransplantation and implantation of different kind of allogeneic cells, tissues, and organs needed for the better functioning and regeneration of living organisms, without the danger of rejection or the need of prolonged administration of immunosuppressive drugs [44, 98–101]. Adipose tissue transplantation has primarily been used as a tool to study physiology and for human reconstructive surgery [102]. Transplantation of adipose tissue is, however, now being explored as a possible tool to promote the beneficial metabolic effects of subcutaneous white adipose tissue and brown adipose tissue, as well as adipose-derived stem cells [103]. Data suggest that the upregulation of brown adipose tissue activity can contribute to a lean and metabolically healthy phenotype in humans; these findings also suggest that the transplantation or stimulation of brown adipose tissue might be used as a therapeutic approach to increase energy expenditure and lower white adipose tissue mass and improve the overall metabolism, also is used as a potential induction of beneficial metabolic effects and treatment of diseases, such as obesity, lipodystrophy, or cardiovascular disease. As the amount of endogenous brown adipose tissue is very limited, identification and manipulation of critical regulators of brown adipose tissue differentiation have been used to engineer brown adipose tissue in order to induce beneficial effects [104, 105]. Ultimately, the clinical applicability of adipose tissue transplantation for the treatment of obesity and metabolic disorders will reside in the achievable level of safety, reliability and efficacy compared with other treatments [17]. In this way, cell therapy undoubtedly will be the most promising therapeutic strategy of this century not only for metabolic syndrome, but also probably for lipodystrophies, progeria, aging, and many other diseases [106–110]. Finally, beyond generating new pharmacological and natural healthy nutritional regimens, we should start thinking in the provocative frontiers of stem cell mechanisms that we must necessarily explore in order to decrease, in the next few years, the deleterious effects of the above-mentioned pathologies. If a “stem cell exhaustion syndrome” could be the cause of all these morbid states, we will surely be able to generate the best modalities to prevent and treat them. Also, may be defeating at last, the erroneous idea of irreversible aging.

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