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Paracrine Effects of Bone Marrow Soup Restore Organ Function,Regeneration, and Repair in Salivary Glands Damaged by Irradiation
Authors:Simon D. Tran  Younan Liu  Dengsheng Xia  Ola M. Maria  Saeed Khalili  Renee Wan-Jou Wang  Vu-Hung Quan  Shen Hu  Jan Seuntjens
Affiliation:1. Faculty of Dentistry, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec City, Canada.; 2. Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec City, Canada.; 3. School of Dentistry, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.; 4. Department of Oncology, Medical Physics Unit, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec City, Canada.; National Institutes of Health, United States of America,
Abstract:

Background

There are reports that bone marrow cell (BM) transplants repaired irradiated salivary glands (SGs) and re-established saliva secretion. However, the mechanisms of action behind these reports have not been elucidated.

Methods

To test if a paracrine mechanism was the main effect behind this reported improvement in salivary organ function, whole BM cells were lysed and its soluble intracellular contents (termed as “BM Soup”) injected into mice with irradiation-injured SGs. The hypothesis was that BM Soup would protect salivary cells, increase tissue neovascularization, function, and regeneration. Two minor aims were also tested a) comparing two routes of delivering BM Soup, intravenous (I.V.) versus intra-glandular injections, and b) comparing the age of the BM Soup’s donors. The treatment-comparison group consisted of irradiated mice receiving injections of living whole BM cells. Control mice received irradiation and injections of saline or sham-irradiation. All mice were followed for 8 weeks post-irradiation.

Results

BM Soup restored salivary flow rates to normal levels, protected salivary acinar, ductal, myoepithelial, and progenitor cells, increased cell proliferation and blood vessels, and up-regulated expression of tissue remodeling/repair/regenerative genes (MMP2, CyclinD1, BMP7, EGF, NGF). BM Soup was as an efficient therapeutic agent as injections of live BM cells. Both intra-glandular or I.V. injections of BM Soup, and from both young and older mouse donors were as effective in repairing irradiated SGs. The intra-glandular route reduced injection frequency/dosage by four-fold.

Conclusion

BM Soup, which contains only the cell by-products, can be advantageously used to repair irradiation-damaged SGs rather than transplanting whole live BM cells which carry the risk of differentiating into unwanted/tumorigenic cell types in SGs.
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