| Literature DB >> 27696124 |
Lucian Beer1,2, Michael Mildner3, Mariann Gyöngyösi4, Hendrik Jan Ankersmit5,6,7.
Abstract
For almost two decades, cell-based therapies have been tested in modern regenerative medicine to either replace or regenerate human cells, tissues, or organs and restore normal function. Secreted paracrine factors are increasingly accepted to exert beneficial biological effects that promote tissue regeneration. These factors are called the cell secretome and include a variety of proteins, lipids, microRNAs, and extracellular vesicles, such as exosomes and microparticles. The stem cell secretome has most commonly been investigated in pre-clinical settings. However, a growing body of evidence indicates that other cell types, such as peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), are capable of releasing significant amounts of biologically active paracrine factors that exert beneficial regenerative effects. The apoptotic PBMC secretome has been successfully used pre-clinically for the treatment of acute myocardial infarction, chronic heart failure, spinal cord injury, stroke, and wound healing. In this review we describe the benefits of choosing PBMCs instead of stem cells in regenerative medicine and characterize the factors released from apoptotic PBMCs. We also discuss pre-clinical studies with apoptotic cell-based therapies and regulatory issues that have to be considered when conducting clinical trials using cell secretome-based products. This should allow the reader to envision PBMC secretome-based therapies as alternatives to all other forms of cell-based therapies.Entities:
Keywords: PBMC; Paracrine; Regenerative medicine; Secretome; Tissue regeneration
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27696124 PMCID: PMC5082595 DOI: 10.1007/s10495-016-1292-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Apoptosis ISSN: 1360-8185 Impact factor: 4.677
Preclinical models of apoptotic cell therapy
| Pathology | Experimental model | Therapeutic effect | Application | Cell number | Cell type | Apoptotic stimulus | Apoptotic stage | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic inflammatory diseases | ||||||||
| Type I diabetes | (NOD) | Prevention (Ag-specific) | i.v. | 105 weekly, 3 weeks | Beta cell line, NT1 | UVB-irradiation | NS | [ |
| (NOD) | Prevention | i.v. | 105 weekly, 3 weeks | Splenic stroma cells | UVB-irradiation | NS | [ | |
| Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) | MOG35−55-induced EAE (C57BL/6) | Prevention (day −8, −4, or −3, but no effect when infused day + 8) (Ag-specific) | i.v. | 2 × 107 (less effect with 6 × 106) | MOG-expressing BALB/c T-cell line W3 versus secondary necrotic cells | Fas ligand | NS | [ |
| Arthritis | CIA (DBA/1) Passive Ab transfer model (K/BxN) | Prevention CIA (DBA/1) Passive Ab transfer Inefficient | i.v. or i.p. | 2 × 107 in total, 3 consecutive days | Thymocytes | Spontaneous (in culture), death by neglect | Average 43 % annexin-V+ and <5 % PI+ cells | [ |
| SCW-induced arthritis (Lewis rats) | Prevention (at time of SCW injection) | i.p. | 2 × 108 | Thymocytes | γ-irradiation (15 Gy) | 90–95 % annexin-V+ and 7AADneg | [ | |
| Methylated BSA-induced arthritis (C57BL/6) | After immunization | i.v. | 3 × 107, 3 consecutive days | Thymocytes | Dexamethasone or etoposide | 60–80 % annexin-V+ and PIneg cells | [ | |
| Methylated BSA-induced arthritis (C57BL/6) | After immunization | i.v. | 2 × 107, 3 consecutive days | Dendritic cells (DCs), but not LPS-activated DCs | Etoposide | 60–75 % annexin-V+ and 8–11 % PI+ cells | [ | |
| Colitis | DSS-induced colitis (BALB/c or C57BL/6) | Prevention (Ag-independent) | i.v. | 2.5–3 × 107 | Thymocytes (syngeneic) Human PBMCs (xenogeneic) | γ-irradiation (4 Gy) or methyl-prednisolone | >60 % annexin-V+ and <5 % PI+ cells | [ |
| Pulmonary fibrosis | Bleomycin-induced lung injury (C57BL/6) | Prevention (Ag-independent) | Intratracheal instillation | 1 × 107 (2 days after disease initiation); no effect later (day 6 or 13) | Human Jurkat T-cell line versus viable Jurkat cells; mouse thymocytes; human epithelial cell line (HeLa) | UV-irradiation | ~70 % nuclear morphology by light microscopy | [ |
| Acute inflammatory diseases | ||||||||
| Sepsis | Thioglycolate-stimulated peritoneum or LPS-stimulated lung (ICR) | Resolution of acute inflammation | i.p. endotracheal instillation | 4 × 107 (3 days after disease initiation) 1.8–2 × 107 (36–48 h after LPS instillation) | Human Jurkat T-cell line versus viable Jurkat cells | UVB-irradiation | 60–80 % morphology by light microscopy | [ |
| LPS-induced endotoxic shock (C57BL/6); cecal ligation and puncture sepsis (C57BL/6) | Increased survival in mice | i.v. | 107 (day 0, or 1, 3, 6 or 24 h after) | Neutrophils | Spontaneous (in culture), death by neglect | >50 % apoptotic cells | [ | |
| Cecal ligation and puncture sepsis (C57BL/6) | Worse survival in mice | i.v. | 5 × 107 (before, day −5) | Spleen cells versus necrotic cells (protective effect) | γ-irradiation (10 Gy) | ~40–100 % annexin-V+ and 7AADneg. cells | [ | |
| LPS-induced lung inflammation (C57BL/6) | Prevention of cellular infiltrates in the airway with reduced cell count in BALF | Intranasal delivery | 106 (with LPS or the day after) | DCs | UVB-irradiation | NS | [ | |
| Fulminant hepatitis | LPS plus | Prevention (Ag-independent) | i.v. | 1–3 × 107 (day −3 to −7); 2 × 108 has no effect | Spleen cells | UVB-irradiation | 90–95 % annexin-V+ and PIneg. cells | [ |
| (p.v.) | ||||||||
| Contact hypersensitivity | Delayed-type hypersensitivity using TNBS (C57BL/6) | Prevention (Ag-specific; TNP-coupled cells) | i.v. | 1 × 107 (day −4 or −7 before antigenic challenge) | Spleen cells versus necrotic cells | γ-irradiation (3 Gy) | NS | [ |
| Transplantation | ||||||||
| Cardiac allograft | ||||||||
| Acute rejection | Different donor/recipient rat strain combinations | Prevention (donor-specific) | i.v. | 5 × 107 (day−7 before Tx) | Spleen cells versus necrotic or viable cells | UVB- or γ-irradiation (1.50 Gy) | ~50 % annexin-V+ and <3 % PI+ cells | [ |
| Different donor/recipient mouse strain combinations | Treatment (donor-specific) | i.v. | 107 (day 7 after Tx) | Spleen cells versus necrotic cells | UVB-irradiation | 90–95 % annexin-V+ and <5–10 % PIneg cells | [ | |
| Different donor/recipient rat strain combinations | Prevention (donor-specific) | i.v. | 106, 107, or 108 (7 days before Tx) | PBMCs versus monocyte depleted PBMCs and viable cells | Mitomycin or UVC-irradiation | NS | [ | |
| Chronic rejection | Intra-abdominal aortic transplantation (BALB/c into C57BL/6) | Prevention (donor-specific) | i.v. | 107 (day−7 before Tx) | Spleen cells versus necrotic or viable cells | UVB-irradiation | 90–95 % annexin-V+ and <5–10 % PIneg cells | [ |
| Islet allograft | STZ-induced diabetes (BALB/c or C57BL/6 with 500–1000 islets from FVB mice) | Prevention (donor-specific) | i.v. | 5 × 106 or 5 × 107 (day−7 before Tx) | Spleen cells | γ-irradiation (35 Gy) | 70–85 % annexin-V+- and <10 % PI+/7AAD+ cells | [ |
| STZ-induced diabetes (BALB/c or C57BL/6 with 200–250 islets from C57BL/6 or BALB/c mice) | Prevention (donor-specific) | i.v | 1.5 × 107 (day−7 before Tx) | Spleen cells versus donor viable spleen cells | UVB-irradiation | >60 % annexin-V+ and PIneg.cells | [ | |
| Hematopoietic cell transplantation | ||||||||
| Hematopoietic engraftment | Different donor/recipient mouse strain combinations | Prevention (Ag-independent) | i.v. | 5 × 106 (day 0, the day of Tx) | Spleen cells (donor, recipient, or third party); xenogeneic [human] Jurkat T-cell line | γ− (40 Gy), UVB-irradiation, or Fas mAb; X ray irradiation (35 Gy) | 70–85 % annexin-V+ and <10 % PI+/7AAD+ cells | [ |
| Acute GvHD | Different donor/recipient mouse strain combinations | Prevention (donor-specific) | i.v. | 5 × 106 (day 0, the day of Tx) | Spleen cells | γ-irradiation (40 Gy) | 70–85 % annexin-V+ and <10 % PI+/7AAD+ cells | [ |
| Allo-Ab after graft rejection | Different donor/recipient mouse strain combinations | Prevention (Ag-independent) | i.v | 5 × 106 (day 0, the day of Tx) | Spleen cells (donor, recipient, third party) | γ-irradiation (40 Gy) | 70–85 % annexin-V+ and <10 % PI+/7AAD+ cells | [ |
| Myocardial infarction | Rat LAD ligation | Treatment | i.v. | After onset of ischemia | Lymphocytes | ATG | NS | [ |
| Rat LAD ligation | Treatment | i.v. | 4 h before and 24 + 48 h after onset of ischemia | Lymphocytes | Anti-lymphocyte serum | NS | [ | |
This table is adapted from [52]
Ag antigen, ATG anti-thymocyte globulin, BALF broncho-alveolar lavage fluid, BSA bovine serum albumin, CIA collagen-induced arthritis, DC dendritic cells, DSS dextran sulfate sodium, EAE experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, GvHD graft-versus-host disease, i.v. intravenous, i.p. intraperitoneal, LPS lipopolysaccharide, mAb monoclonal antibody, MOG myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein protein, MOG , myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein peptide, Neg. negative, NS not specified, OVA ovalbumin, PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cell, p.v. portal vein, SCW streptococcal cell wall, STZ streptozocin, UV ultraviolet, UVB ultraviolet B (280–320 nm), TNBS 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid, TNP trinitrophenyl, Tx transplantation
Pre-clinical and clinical application of apoptotic PBMC-S
| Species | Experimental model | Effects on disease | Application | Concentration at cultivation | PBMC source | Apoptotic stimulus | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat | AMI | Reduced infarct size, improved functional parameters | i.v. | 25 × 106 | Syngen | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Pig | AMI | i.v. | 25 × 106 | Syngen | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ | |
| Pig | AMI | i.v. | 25 × 106 | Syngen | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ | |
| Mice | EAM | Resolution of acute inflammation | i.p. | 25 × 106 | Syngen | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Mice | Dermal wound | Improved wound healing | Topical | 25 × 106 | Syngen | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Pig | Chronic HF | Improved functional parameters | i.m. | 25 × 106 | Syngen | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Rat | Stroke | Reduced infarct size, improved neurological parameters | i.v. | 25 × 106 | Syngen/human GMP viral cleared | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Rat | SCI | Reduced trauma size, improved neurological parameters | i.p. | 25 × 106 | Human GMP viral cleared | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Pig | Dermal wound | Improved wound healing | Topical | 25 × 106 | Human | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Pig | AMI | Reduced infarct size, improved functional parameters | i.v. | 25 × 106 | Syngen GMP viral cleared | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | [ |
| Human | Dermal wound | Safety and tolerability | Topical | 25 × 106 | Autologous GMP | γ-irradiation (60 Gy) | ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02284360a |
AMI acute myocardial infarction, EAM experimental autoimmune myocarditis, HF heart failure, SCI spinal cord injury, i.v. intravenous, i.p. intraperitoneal, i.m. intramuscular
aStudy report—synopsis: http://www.aposcience.at/fileadmin/user_upload/MarsyasI-Clinical_study-Study_report_Synopsis.pdf
Fig. 1Schematic workflow of the preparation of apoptotic PBMC secretome. PBMC-enriched blood bags are obtained by blood banks and used for the generation of paracrine factors. The PBMCs are further purified using Ficoll-paque centrifugation. Apoptosis is induced by 60 Gy gamma-irradiation. The PBMCs are then cultivated at 37 °C in 5 % CO/5 % CO2 for 24 h. The cells are removed by centrifugation and ultrafiltration. The remaining cell culture supernatant containing the paracrine factors is subjected to methylene blue viral clearance. The viral cleared supernatant is then lyophilized to remove all soluble factors. The remaining solid compartments are subjected to a second viral clearance step and irradiated with 30k Gy, eventually yielding the final product produced in accordance with GMP
Fig. 2Components, mode of action, and indication of paracrine factor-based therapies. The cell secretome consists of multiple paracrine factors that can be categorized into different biological classes. The best investigated components are proteins, lipids, and exosomes, which have been shown to exhibit in vitro and in vivo biological activity. Due to the complexity of paracrine factors present in the cell secretome, it is likely that other factors exert biological activity. Paracrine factors derived from apoptotic PBMCs have been shown to induce angiogenesis and vasodilation, exert antimicrobial activity, enhance re-epithelialization, inhibit platelet coagulation, induce M1–M2 polarization, augment the release of neurotropic factors, exhibit cytoprotective capacities due to the up-regulation of anti-apoptotic proteins, and act in an immunomodulatory manner. Based on these biological effects, the PBMC secretome has been successfully tested in animal models to treat acute myocardial infarction, chronic heart failure, myocarditis, skin ulcer, stroke, and spinal cord injury
Fig. 3Regulatory issues for cell-free therapies. To enable regulatory approval for testing paracrine factor-based therapy, several regulatory issues have to be fulfilled. First, cell-free therapies have to be discriminated from cell-based medicinal products (ATMP). ATMPs deal with living cells, whereas paracrine factor-based therapies, such as APOSEC™, contain only factors produced by living cells. In cell therapies, the mode of action is thought to be mediated by the cells or their paracrine factors, whereas in cell-free therapies multiple paracrine factors are thought to exert the biological activity. The starting material in both therapies are cells of human origin, either autologous or allogeneic. An important difference between these two types of therapies is that viral clearance is not possible in ATMPs, but viral clearance steps can be applied in cell-free therapies such as APOSEC™. In the right side of the figure, the different regulatory steps that have to be performed during the development of a cell-free therapy are depicted, starting from pre-clinical studies and leading to Phase I/Phase II studies
Fig. 4Ethical, economic, and safety considerations of stem cell-based and paracrine factor-based therapies. In contrast to stem cell-based therapies, paracrine factor-based therapies can be seen as an economic, ethical, and fully acceptable therapeutic strategy lacking significant safety issues and restrictions in production capacity. Viral clearance methods are not possible in stem cell-based therapies containing myoblasts, bone marrow stem cells (BM-SCs), peripheral blood stem cells (PB-SCs), adipose tissue-derived stem cells (AT-SCs), mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), cardiac stem cells (Cardiac-SCs), embryonic stem cells (ESCs), and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). In addition, ESC- and iPSC-based therapies are associated with high costs for cell manufacturing and low cell numbers. Stem cell-based therapies with ESCs, and especially iPSCs, also have ethical and safety concerns because these cells have on embryonic source or bear a risk of malignant transformation. In contrast, paracrine factors derived from PBMCs or MSCs, including exosomes, proteins, and lipids, can be subjected to viral clearance methods, guaranteeing a viral-free medical drug. In addition, paracrine factors, especially from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), can be produced and stored in high amounts with low costs