Pericytes for therapeutic bone repair

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Abstract

Besides seminal functions in angiogenesis and blood pressure regulation, microvascular pericytes possess a latent tissue regenerative potential that can be revealed in culture following transition into mesenchymal stem cells. Endowed with robust osteogenic potential, pericytes and other related perivascular cells extracted from adipose tissue represent a potent and abundant cell source for refined bone tissue engineering and improved cell therapies of fractures and other bone defects. The use of diverse bone formation assays in vivo, which include mouse muscle pocket osteogenesis and calvaria replenishment, rat and dog spine fusion, and rat non-union fracture healing, has confirmed the superiority of purified perivascular cells for skeletal (re)generation. As a surprising observation though, despite strong endogenous bone-forming potential, perivascular cells drive bone regeneration essentially indirectly, via recruitment by secreted factors of local osteo-progenitors.

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Meyers, C. A., Casamitjana, J., Chang, L., Zhang, L., James, A. W., & Péault, B. (2018). Pericytes for therapeutic bone repair. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 1109, pp. 21–32). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-02601-1_3

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