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Obesity blunts amelioration of cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis by human mesenchymal stem/stromal cell-derived extracellular vesicles.

Renovascular hypertension (RVH) can induce cardiac damage that is reversible using adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (A-MSC). However, A-MSCs isolated from obese patients are less effective than lean-A-MSC in blunting hypertensive cardiomyopathy in mice with RVH. We tested the hypothesis that this impairment extends to their obese-A-MSC-extracellular vesicles (EVs) progeny. MSCs were harvested from the subcutaneous fat of obese and lean human subjects, and their EVs were collected and injected into the aorta of mice two weeks after renal artery stenosis or sham surgery. Cardiac left ventricular (LV) function was studied with MRI two weeks later, and myocardial tissue ex-vivo. Blood pressure, LV myocardial wall thickness, mass, and fibrosis that were elevated in RVH mice were suppressed only by lean-EVs. Hence, human A-MSC-derived lean-EVs are more effective than obese-EVs in blunting hypertensive cardiac injury in RVH mice. These observations highlight impaired paracrine repair potency of endogenous MSC in obese patients.

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