Vitamin E pretreated Wharton's jelly-derived mesenchymal stem cells attenuate CCl-induced hepatocyte injury in vitro and liver fibrosis in vivo.

Biochem Pharmacol

National Centre of Excellence in Molecular Biology, University of Punjab, 87-West Canal Bank Road, Lahore, Pakistan; Allama Iqbal Medical Research Centre, Jinnah Burn and Reconstructive Surgery Centre, Lahore, Pakistan. Electronic address:

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research indicates that the oxidative environment in fibrotic liver reduces the effectiveness of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) therapy, suggesting that pharmacological pretreatment can enhance their therapeutic potential.
  • The study specifically explored whether Vitamin E pretreatment could improve the antifibrotic effects of Wharton's jelly-derived MSCs (WJMSCs) by co-culturing them with injured rat liver cells and monitoring various markers of liver injury.
  • Results showed that Vitamin E-pretreated WJMSCs not only rescued injured hepatocytes and decreased fibrosis markers but also demonstrated better integration into the liver compared to untreated WJMSCs, indicating that Vitamin E enhances the durability and efficacy of MSC treatments for liver fibrosis.

Article Abstract

Oxidative microenvironment in fibrotic liver alleviates the efficacious outcome of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs)-based cell therapy. Recent evidence suggests that pharmacological pretreatment is a rational approach to harness the MSCs with higher therapeutic potential. Here, we investigated whether Vitamin E pretreatment can boost the antifibrotic effects of Wharton's jelly-derived MSCs (WJMSCs). We used rat liver-derived hepatocytes injured by CCl treatment in co-culture system with Vitamin E pretreated-WJMSCs (Vit E-WJMSCs) to evaluate the hepatoprotective effect of Vit E-WJMSCs. After 24 h of co-culturing, we found that Vit E-WJMSCs rescued injured hepatocytes as hepatocyte injury-associated medium (AST, ALT, and ALP) and mRNA (Cyp2e1, Hif1-α, and Il-1β) markers reduced to normal levels. Subsequently, CCl-induced liver fibrosis rat models were employed to examine the antifibrotic potential of Vit E-WJMSCs. After 1 month of cell transplantation, it was revealed that Vit E-WJMSCs transplantation ceased fibrotic progression, as evident by improved hepatic architecture and functions, more significantly in comparison to naïve WJMSCs. In addition, Vit E-WJMSCs transplantation decreased the expressions of fibrosis-associated gene (Tgf-β1, α-Sma, and Col1α1) markers in the liver parenchyma. Intriguingly, the results of tracing experiments discovered that more WJMSCs engrafted in the Vit E-WJMSCs treated rat livers compared to naïve WJMSCs treated livers. These findings implicate that pretreatment of WJMSCs with Vitamin E improves their tolerance to hostile niche of fibrotic liver; thereby further enhancing their efficacy for hepatic fibrosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114480DOI Listing

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