3 research outputs found

    Vasculogenic properties of adventitial Sca-1(+)CD45(+) progenitor cells in mice: a potential source of vasa vasorum in atherosclerosis

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    The cellular origins of vasa vasorum are ill-defined and may involve circulating or local progenitor cells. We previously discovered that murine aortic adventitia contains Sca-1âșCD45âș progenitors that produce macrophages. Here we investigated whether they are also vasculogenic. In aortas of C57BL/6 mice, Sca-1âșCD45âș cells were localised to adventitia and lacked surface expression of endothelial markers (<1% for CD31, CD144, TIE-2). In contrast, they did show expression of CD31, CD144, TIE-2 and VEGFR2 in atherosclerotic ApoE(-/-) aortas. Although Sca-1âșCD45âș cells from C57BL/6 aorta did not express CD31, they formed CD31âș colonies in endothelial differentiation media and produced interconnecting vascular-like cords in Matrigel that contained both endothelial cells and a small population of macrophages, which were located at branch points. Transfer of aortic Sca-1âșCD45âș cells generated endothelial cells and neovessels de novo in a hindlimb model of ischaemia and resulted in a 50% increase in perfusion compared to cell-free control. Similarly, their injection into the carotid adventitia of ApoE(-/-) mice produced donor-derived adventitial and peri-adventitial microvessels after atherogenic diet, suggestive of newly formed vasa vasorum. These findings show that beyond its content of macrophage progenitors, adventitial Sca-1âșCD45âș cells are also vasculogenic and may be a source of vasa vasorum during atherogenesis.Deborah Toledo-Flores, Anna Williamson, Nisha Schwarz, Sanuja Fernando, Catherine Dimasi, Tyra A. Witt, Thao M. Nguyen, Amrutesh S . Puranik, Colin D. Chue, Sinny Delacroix, Daniel B. Spoon, Claudine S. Bonder, Christina A. Bursill, Belinda A. Di Bartolo, Stephen J. Nicholls, Robert D. Simari, Peter J. Psalti
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