Study on the Role and Mechanism of Exosomes Derived from Dental Pulp Stem Cells in Promoting Regeneration of Myelin Sheath in Rats with Sciatic Nerve Injury
- PMID: 38285287
- DOI: 10.1007/s12035-024-03960-9
Study on the Role and Mechanism of Exosomes Derived from Dental Pulp Stem Cells in Promoting Regeneration of Myelin Sheath in Rats with Sciatic Nerve Injury
Abstract
The prognosis of peripheral nerve injury (PNI) is usually poor, and currently, there is no effective treatment for PNI. Studies have shown that exosomes derived from mesenchymal stem cells could promote nerve regeneration by optimizing the function of endogenous Schwann cells (SCs), while the mechanism is unclear. Autophagy, a highly conserved intracellular catabolic process responsible for maintaining cellular homeostasis, has been proved to be involved in the regulation of nerve repair after injury. We explored the effect of exosomes derived from dental pulp stem cells (DPSC-Exos) on the regeneration of myelin sheath in rats with sciatic nerve injury (SNI). In vitro and in vivo experiments were performed to clarify whether the effect of DPSC-Exos is associated with autophagy of SCs and to reveal the mechanism at the molecular level. Our results showed that the SCs of SNI rats exhibited the obvious autophagic characteristics, and the increase of P53 expression was an internal factor of autophagy. Our mechanism research indicated that DPSC-Exos could deliver miR-122-5p from DPSCs into SCs and suppressed the rapamycin (RAPA)-induced autophagy in SCs by inhibiting P53 expression. Rescue experiments showed that both the use of GW4869 and overexpression of exogenous P53 in SCs could reverse the inhibitory effect of DPSCs on the autophagy in SCs from co-culture system. In short, our study indicated that DPSC-Exos could promote the regeneration of the myelin sheath through suppressing the autophagy in SCs caused by PNI via miR-122-5p/P53 pathway; this provides researchers with another option for precise repair of PNI.
Keywords: Autophagy; DPSC-Exos; P53; Peripheral nerve injury; Schwann cells.
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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- Practice of the Comprehensive Surgical Diagnosis/National Clinical Key Specialized Project
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- Difficult Diseases in the Oral/National Clinical Key Specialized Project
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