Clinical applications of stem cell-derived exosomes.
Fei TanXuran LiZhao WangJiaojiao LiKhawar ShahzadJialin C ZhengPublished in: Signal transduction and targeted therapy (2024)
Although stem cell-based therapy has demonstrated considerable potential to manage certain diseases more successfully than conventional surgery, it nevertheless comes with inescapable drawbacks that might limit its clinical translation. Compared to stem cells, stem cell-derived exosomes possess numerous advantages, such as non-immunogenicity, non-infusion toxicity, easy access, effortless preservation, and freedom from tumorigenic potential and ethical issues. Exosomes can inherit similar therapeutic effects from their parental cells such as embryonic stem cells and adult stem cells through vertical delivery of their pluripotency or multipotency. After a thorough search and meticulous dissection of relevant literature from the last five years, we present this comprehensive, up-to-date, specialty-specific and disease-oriented review to highlight the surgical application and potential of stem cell-derived exosomes. Exosomes derived from stem cells (e.g., embryonic, induced pluripotent, hematopoietic, mesenchymal, neural, and endothelial stem cells) are capable of treating numerous diseases encountered in orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, plastic surgery, general surgery, cardiothoracic surgery, urology, head and neck surgery, ophthalmology, and obstetrics and gynecology. The diverse therapeutic effects of stem cells-derived exosomes are a hierarchical translation through tissue-specific responses, and cell-specific molecular signaling pathways. In this review, we highlight stem cell-derived exosomes as a viable and potent alternative to stem cell-based therapy in managing various surgical conditions. We recommend that future research combines wisdoms from surgeons, nanomedicine practitioners, and stem cell researchers in this relevant and intriguing research area.
Keyphrases
- stem cells
- minimally invasive
- cell therapy
- coronary artery bypass
- embryonic stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- surgical site infection
- induced apoptosis
- signaling pathway
- primary care
- bone marrow
- single cell
- oxidative stress
- human health
- machine learning
- cell cycle arrest
- acute coronary syndrome
- current status
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- high glucose
- cell proliferation
- pi k akt
- single molecule
- young adults
- anti inflammatory