Modulation of muscle ischemia repair by stem cells and of their damage by diabetes - Project Summary/Abstract
Background. Critical limb ischemia (CLI), a devastating peripheral arterial disease, affects patients with type 2
diabetes (T2D) and obesity, and is prevalent in minorities. Half of cases require amputation, leading to up to
40% mortality and worse prognosis in minorities. There is no effective medical treatment. Several stem cells
are promising in clinical trials, but there are three concerns: a) studies based mainly on their angiogenic
capacity, but not on their efficacy in skeletal muscle regeneration or neural repair; b) stem cell autografts from
the T2D patient may be severely impaired by long term exposure to the T2D milieu; and c) the
ischemic/diabetic tissue impact on the implanted stem cells is not targeted. We have shown: a) at short periods
muscle derived stem cells (MDSC) stimulate early myogenesis in the muscle of the db/db mouse with CLI, but
this is accompanied by myostatin overexpression and fibrosis that interfere with myofiber formation; b) the T2D
milieu damages MDSC and impairs their repair capacity by in another diabetic complication, imprinting their
transcriptional signature; c) pioglitazone at low doses prevents inflammation and fibrosis independently from
glycemic control, and myostatin inhibitors stimulate muscle mass and are antifibrotic and proangiogenic.
Overall goal: to optimize in a T2D mouse model the stem cell therapy of CLI, comparing MDSC with a stem
cell currently in clinical trials for CLI, adipose derived stem cells (ADSC). This is in order to: a) stimulate
myogenesis and regenerate striated myofibers, in addition to neoangiogenesis; and b) define and counteract
the impairment of stem cell repair capacity upon long exposure to the T2D milieu, by pharmacological
modulation with pioglitazone, a PPARγ agonist, and/or shRNA against myostatin as inhibitor of this negative
regulator of muscle mass and pro-lipofibrotic effector, and study their mechanism and impact on the stem cells
transcriptional signatures. Specific Aim 1. To determine in the T2D mouse model of CLI: 1) the repair efficacy
of MDSC and ADSC on the ischemic/diabetic muscle, and the impact of their prior exposure to the T2D milieu
on efficacy and underlying transcriptional signatures; and 2) whether pharmacological modulation with
pioglitazone and/or a myostatin inhibitor stimulates stem cells repair and counteracts the T2D-induced
damage. Specific Aim 2. To characterize in vitro: a) the roles of hyperglycemia and/or dyslipidemia in the
T2D-induced stem cell damage; b) a preliminary insight on the mechanism of pioglitazone and myostatin
inhibition effects on survival and differentiation of stem cells, and on their transcriptional signatures affected by
treatments. Impact/innovation: High translational impact of a very novel approach aiming to improve the
efficacy of stem cells targeting myofiber repair, through concurrent pharmacological modulation with a new
modality for a widely clinically used drug and a promising ancillary approach, to define if and how the T2DM
milieu damages them, and to counteract this damage through the drug combinations.