Abstract

The extracellular vesicles (EVs) secreted by adipose tissue-derived stromal cells (ASC) are microenvironment modulators in tissue regeneration by releasing their molecular cargo, including miRNAs. However, the influence of ASC-derived extracellular vesicles (ASC-EVs) on endothelial cells (ECs) and vascularisation is poorly understood. The present study aimed to determine the pro-angiogenic effects of ASC-EVs and explore their miRNA profile. EVs were isolated from normoxic and hypoxic cultured ASC conditioned culture medium. The miRNA expression profile was determined by miRseq, and EV markers were determined by Western blot and immunofluorescence staining. The uptake dynamics of fluorescently labelled EVs were monitored for 24h. ASC-EVs' pro-angiogenic effect was assessed by sprouting ex vivo rat aorta rings in left ventricular-decellularized extracellular matrix (LV dECM) hydrogel or basement membrane hydrogel (Geltrex®). ASC-EVs augmented vascular network formation by aorta rings. The vascular network topology and stability were influenced in a hydrogel scaffold-dependent fashion. The ASC-EVs were enriched for several miRNA families/clusters, including Let-7 and miR-23/27/24. The miRNA-1290 was the highest enriched non-clustered miRNA, accounting for almost 20% of all reads in hypoxia EVs. Our study revealed that ASC-EVs augment in vitro and ex vivo vascularisation, likely due to the enriched pro-angiogenic miRNAs in EVs, particularly miR-1290. Our results show promise for regenerative and revascularisation therapies based on ASC-EV-loaded ECM hydrogels.

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