| Literature DB >> 27895644 |
Monica Reis1, Justyna Ogonek2, Marsela Qesari3, Nuno M Borges1, Lindsay Nicholson1, Liane Preußner4, Anne Mary Dickinson5, Xiao-Nong Wang1, Eva M Weissinger2, Anne Richter4.
Abstract
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is associated with serious complications, and improvement of the overall clinical outcome of patients with hematological malignancies is necessary. During the last decades, posttransplant donor-derived adoptive cellular immunotherapeutic strategies have been progressively developed for the treatment of graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), infectious complications, and tumor relapses. To date, the common challenge of all these cell-based approaches is their implementation for clinical application. Establishing an appropriate manufacturing process, to guarantee safe and effective therapeutics with simultaneous consideration of economic requirements is one of the most critical hurdles. In this review, we will discuss the recent scientific findings, clinical experiences, and technological advances for cell processing toward the application of mesenchymal stromal cells as a therapy for treatment of severe GvHD, virus-specific T cells for targeting life-threating infections, and of chimeric antigen receptors-engineered T cells to treat relapsed leukemia.Entities:
Keywords: T cells; adoptive transfer; cell manufacture; chimeric antigen receptor; extracellular vesicles; immunomodulation; infection; mesenchymal stromal cells
Year: 2016 PMID: 27895644 PMCID: PMC5107577 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Prophylactic use of MSCs to prevent GvHD.
| MSCs | HSCs | MSC group | Ctrl group | Observation on GvHD incidence/severity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UCB | BM, PBSC | 21 | None | 9 of 21 patients developed aGvHD (II–IV) | ( |
| 0.5 × 106/kg | Haploidentical | ||||
| Single dose | Without TCD | ||||
| UCB | BM, PBSC | 50 | None | 12 of 50 patients developed aGvHD (II–IV) | ( |
| 0.5 × 106/kg | Haploidentical | ||||
| Single dose | |||||
| BM-PL of HSC donor | BM | 19 | 18 | 1 of 19 patients had aGvHD in MSC group | ( |
| 0.9–1.3 × 106/kg | Donor type NR | Randomized | 6 of 18 patients had aGvHD (II–IV) in Ctrl group | ||
| Single dose | |||||
| BM, third party | PBSC | 20 | 16 | 9 of 20 patients had aGvHD (II–IV) in MSC group | ( |
| 0.9–1.3 × 106/kg | MMR or MMU | Historic | 9 of 16 patients had aGvHD (II–IV) in Ctrl group | ||
| Single dose |
BM, bone marrow; PBSC, peripheral blood stem cells; UCB, umbilical cord blood; HSCs, hematopoietic stem cells; NR, not reported; BM-PL, platelet lysate expanded MSC; MMR, HLA-mismatch related donors; MMU, HLA-mismatched unrelated donors; TCD, T cell depletion.
Therapeutic use of MSC infusion for steroid-resistant/refractory aGvHD.
| MSCs | HSCs | No. Pts | Clinical outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BM, third party | BM, PBSC, CUB | 28 | CR: 61% | ( |
| 1 × 106/kg | HLA identical | OR: 75% | ||
| 2–8 infusions | Haploidentical | |||
| HLA-mismatched | ||||
| BM-PL, third party | BM, PBSC, UCB | 40 | CR: 27.5% | ( |
| 1.5 × 106/kg | HLA identical | OR: 67.5% | ||
| 1–5 infusions | Haploidentical | |||
| HLA-mismatched | ||||
| BM-PL, third party | NR | 25 | CR: 46% | ( |
| 1.1 × 106/kg | OR: 71% | |||
| 2–4 infusions | ||||
| BM, third party | BM, PBSC, UCB, DLI | 75 | CR: NR | ( |
| 2 × 106/kg | HLA-matched | OR: 61.3% | ||
| 8–12 infusions | HLA-mismatched | |||
| BM, third party | BM, PBSC, UCB, DLI | 37 | CR: 65% | ( |
| 1–2 × 106/kg | HLA identical, MUD | OR: 86% | ||
| 1–13 infusions | Haploidentical | |||
| BM, third party | BM, PBSC, UCB | 50 | CR: 34% | ( |
| 1.1 × 106/kg | HLA identical, MUD | IR: 66% | ||
| 1–4 infusions | Haploidentical, UCB | |||
| BM, third party | PBSC | 12 | CR: 58.3% | ( |
| 1.7–2.3 × 106/kg | MUD | OR: 91.7% | ||
| 2–8 infusion | ||||
| BM-AS/AS + PL | BM, PBSC | 10 | CR: 10% | ( |
| haplo- & RD | HLA-matched | OR: 70% | ||
| 1–2 × 106/kg | HLA-mismatched | |||
| 1–4 infusions | ||||
| BM, third party | BM, PBSC, UCB | 12 | CR: 58% | ( |
| 8 × 106/kg | HLA-matched | OR: 75% | ||
| 2 × 106/kg | HLA-mismatched | |||
| 8–12 infusions | ||||
| BM-PL, third party | BM, PBSC, UCB | 11 | CR: 23.8% | ( |
| 1.2 × 106/kg | HLA-matched | OR: 71.4% | ||
| 1–5 infusions | HLA-mismatched |
No. Pts, number of patients; BM, bone marrow; PBSC, peripheral blood stem cells; UCB, umbilical cord blood; DLI, donor lymphocyte infusions; MUD, HLA-matched unrelated donor; RD, related donors; HSC, hematopoietic stem cells; NR, not reported; BM-PL, platelet lysate expanded MSC; BM-AS, human serum expanded MSC; CR, complete response; OR, overall response; IR, initial response.
Nomenclature and classification of the different types of vesicles.
| Characteristics | Exosomes | Microvesicles | Apoptotic bodies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Size | 20–100 nm | 50–1000 nm | 500–5000 nm |
| Shape | Cup shaped | Irregular | Heterogeneous |
| Sedimentation | 100,000 × | Size dependent at 100,000 × | Size dependent at 100,000 × |
| Sucrose gradient | 1.13–1.19 g/ml | 1.04–1.07 g/ml | 1.16 and 1.28 g/ml |
| Markers | Tetraspanins (CD63/CD9), Alix, TSG1, ESCRT components, flotilin | Integrins, tetraspanins, selectins, and CD40 ligand | Histones |
| Lipids | Cholesterol, sphingomyelin, ceramide, lipid rafts, phosphatidylserine | Phosphatidylserine | High amounts of phosphatidylserine |
| Origin | Endolysosomal pathway; intraluminal budding into multivesicular bodies and released by fusion of the multivesicular bodies with the cell membrane | Cell surface; outward budding of cell membrane | Cell surface; outward blebbing of apoptotic cell membrane |
| Contents | mRNA, microRNA, and other non-coding RNAs; cytoplasmic and membrane proteins (including HSP and cell-specific receptors) | mRNA, microRNA (miRNA), and other non-coding RNAs; cytoplasmic proteins and membrane proteins, including cell-specific receptors | Nuclear fractions and cell organelles |
ESCRT, endosomal sorting complexes required for transport; MVB, multivesicular bodies; HSP, heat-shock protein; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Table has been adapted from published literatures (.
Figure 1Transmission electron microscopy micrograph of whole-mounted extracellular vesicles-purified human MSCs. MSC-EVs exhibit a spheroid, cup-shaped morphology. Scale bar shows 100 nm. Photography courtesy of Monica Reis.
Summary of the immunomodulatory potential of MSC-EVs.
| Target cells | Experimental approach | Source of EVs and isolation method | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PBMC | Human umbilical cord MSC | ↓ Proliferation of CD8+ and CD4+ | ( | |
| UC (Sed.: 10,000 × | ↑ Percentage of CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ Tregs | |||
| ↑ TGF-β1 and IL-10; ↓ IFN-γ, IL-6, TNF-α | ||||
| Colon cells | TNBS-induced colitis model | Human BM-MSCs | ↓ Pro-inflammatory cytokine levels in injured colons | ( |
| UC (Sed.: 100,000 × | Suppression of apoptosis | |||
| Inhibition of NF-kBp65 signal transduction pathways | ||||
| T lymphocytes | Human ASCs | Decreased T-cell activation and proliferation | ( | |
| UC (Sed.: 100,000 × | ||||
| Auto-reactive lymphocytes | EAE mice | Murine BM-MSCs | EVs express PD-L1, galectin-1, and TGF-β1 | ( |
| UC (Sed.: 100,000 × | Inhibition auto-reactive T-cell responses | |||
| ↑ Apoptosis | ||||
| ↑ CD4+CD25+FoxP3+ Tregs | ||||
| PBMC from type I diabetes patients | Human BM-MSC | ↓ IFN-γ production and ↑ TGF-β, IL-10, IL-6, and PGE2 | ( | |
| UC (Sed.: 100,000 × | ↓ Level of Th17 cells and ↑ FoxP3+ Tregs | |||
| B lymphocytes | Human BM-MSC | Inhibition of B-cell proliferation and differentiation | ( | |
| UC (Sed.: 100,000 × | ||||
| THP-1 MФ | Human ESC-MSC | ↑ Anti-inflammatory cytokines | ( | |
| HPLC | ↓ Pro-inflammatory cytokines | |||
| TLR-dependent induction of M2-like phenotype | ||||
| Treg cell expansion | ||||
| LPS treated UC-MSC | MФ polarization | ( | ||
| UC (Sed.: 100,000 × | ||||
| moDCs from type I diabetic patients | Human BM-MSC | EV-conditioned DCs exhibited immature phenotype | ( | |
| UC (Sed.: 100,000 × | ↑ IL-10, IL-6, and TGFβ | |||
| ↓ IL-17 and Th17 cells | ||||
| Treg expansion |
Sed., sedimentation rate; UC, ultracentrifugation; UF, ultrafiltration; Tregs, regulatory T cells; EAE, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; TNBS, 2,4,6 trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid; HPLC, high performance liquid chromatography; BM-MSC, bone marrow-derived MSC; ASC, adipocyte-derived stem cells; NF-kBp65, nuclear Factor kappa B p65; TGF-β1, transforming growth factor beta 1; IL-10, interleukin 10; IFN-γ, interferon gamma; IL-6, interleukin 6; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor alpha; PD-L1, programed death ligand 1; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; TLR, toll-like receptor; IL-17, interleukin 17; Th, T-helper cell; MФ, macrophage; moDCs, monocyte-derived dendritic cells; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; FoxP3, forkhead box P3.
Figure 2Overview of the bioactive molecules secreted by MSCs and their impact on cells of the innate and adaptive immune response. Some bioactive molecules are constitutively expressed by MSCs, while others are “licensed” by exposure to an inflammatory environment or upon TLR stimulation (241). Depending upon the bioactive secretion profile, MSCs can skew the differentiation of CD4+ T-helper cells into various T-cell subsets, each with distinct cytokine and gene expression profiles, can promote the generation of regulatory T cells (Tregs) and inhibit the proliferation of cytotoxic T cells (242–244). MSCs can modulate the development of conventional and plasmacytoid DC (245–247) while DCs generated in the presence of MSCs have functional properties typical of tolerogenic DCs (248–250). Similarly, MSCs can polarize macrophages of the classical M1 pro-inflammatory phenotype to that of an alternative anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype (215), or directly induce this alternative phenotype by coculture (251). In contrast to other cell types, MSC modulation of B-cell function is poorly understood and the findings are contentious. Results from in vitro experiments show that while MSCs impair the proliferation and terminal differentiation of B cells (252) they have also been shown to stimulate antibody secretion (253). More recently, data have emerged which suggests that MSCs can promote the induction of regulatory B cells (Breg) (254). Neutrophils are an important mediator of the innate response and MSCs have been shown to enhance their survival through an IL-6-mediated mechanism, concomitant with the downregulation of reactive oxygen species, thereby conserving the pool of neutrophils primed to respond rapidly to infection (255). MSCs inhibit the proliferation and differentiation of monocytes to immature dendritic cells (DCs) (245). Natural Killer (NK) cells and MSCs have a reciprocal relationship; MSCs can inhibit the proliferation and cytotoxicity of resting NK cells and their cytokine production in vitro, while activated NK cells can be cytotoxic to MSCs (256). MSCs constitutively secrete Factor H which inhibits complement activation (257), conversely the complement activation products C3a and C5a released upon tissue damage are chemotactic factors for MSCs (258), recruiting them to sites of injury. Abbreviations: CCR, C-C chemokine; CD, cluster of differentiation; cDC, conventional dendritic cell; CTL, cytotoxic T-lymphocyte; GM-CSF, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor; HGF, hepatocyte growth factor; HLA, human leukocyte antigen; IDO, indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase; IFNγ, interferon-γ; Ig, immunoglobulin; IL, interleukin; MФ, macrophage; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; Mono, monocyte; Neutro, neutrophil; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa B; PD-1, programed cell death protein-1; pDC, plasmacytoid dendritic cell; PGE2, prostaglandin E2; TGFβ, transforming growth factor β; Th, T-helper cell; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor α; tolDC, tolerogenic dendritic cell; TSG, TNF-α-stimulated protein.
Figure 3Principle approach of adoptive T cell therapy for treatment of viral infections. Out of peripheral blood of the HSCT donor the virus-specific T cells are selected. The generated T cell product is infused into the patient suffering of viral complications after allogenic HSCT.
Figure 4Methods for . For the in vitro manufacture process blood is used as the cellular source, mostly derived from the stem cell donor. Selection of virus-specific T cell and thereby depletion of potentially alloreactive T cells from the blood can be achieved by different methods. (A) Activation and expansion: peripheral blood cells are incubated with viral antigen. Antigen-presenting cells (APC) phagocytose, process, and present the antigen as peptides on MHC molecules. Virus-specific T cells recognize their cognate viral antigenic peptide via the TCR, get activated, and later on start proliferating for several days. In many applications, additional repetitive antigen restimulations are performed to further increase the expansion and thereby the number and the purity of the virus-specific T cell population. Dependent on the viral antigen and APC used for the process, either CD4+ and/or CD8+ T cells are contained in the product. (B) MHC class I/peptide multimer technology: virus-specific T cells within peripheral blood become labeled by a MHC class I/peptide multimer reagent, which binds to the TCR of the viral peptide-specific T cells. After an additional labeling step with magnetic beads the CD8+ virus-specific T cells are magnetically enriched. (C) Cytokine-capture assay: peripheral blood cells are incubated with viral antigen, e.g., a peptide pool, for 4 h. APC present the peptides on MHC molecules to virus-specific T cells, which start producing IFN-γ. Cells are labeled with a catch matrix consisting of a CD45 antibody conjugated to an Anti-IFN-γ antibody. In this way, secreted IFN-γ is specifically captured on the cell surface of the activated virus-specific T cells. Subsequently, the cell-bound IFN-γ is detected with Anti-IFN-γ magnetic particles and the virus-specific T cells are magnetically enriched. Both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells are obtained by this method.
Figure 5. (A) CMV-specific T cells were isolated from blood of seropositive donors by IFN-γ secretion assay and expanded in vitro between 2 and 4 weeks with IL-2 and irradiated feeder cells. (B) CMV-specific T cell lines and unselected PBMCs from the same donor where exposed to HLA-mismatched PBMCs (recipient’s cells) in a mixed lymphocyte reaction for 7 days followed by incubation with recipient’s skin for further 3 days. Then skin biopsies were collected, fixed in formalin, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. (C) The histopathological damage in the skin biopsies displays a readout of the allogeneic-HLA reactions caused by T cell activation. The images show that CMV-specific T cells do not cause GvHR (Grade I) as opposed to Unselected PBMCs (Grade II and III) from the same donor.
Clinical trials with therapeutic treatment of CMV-specific T cells.
| Reference | Method | No. pts | Results | Dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Einsele et al. ( | 8 | 5/7 evaluable pts eliminated infection | 107 cells/m2 | |
| Peggs et al. ( | 16 | Pre-emptive therapy: 8/16 did not require antiviral treatment | 0.2–1 × 105 T cells/kg | |
| Bao et al. ( | 7 | 3/7 pts cleared infection | 2.5–5 × 105 CMV-specific CD3+ cells/kg | |
| Blyth et al. ( | 21 | Pre-emptive therapy: 13/21 did not require antiviral treatment | 2 × 107 CMV CTLs/m2 | |
| Koehne et al. ( | 16 | 14/16 pts eliminated infection | 5 × 105–3 doses with 1 × 106 T cells/kg | |
| Feuchtinger et al. ( | Direct isolation of CMV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 18 | 15/18 responders | 1.2–166 × 103 cells/kg |
| Peggs et al. ( | Direct isolation of CMV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 11 | Pre-emptive therapy: 2/11 did not require antiviral treatment | 104 CD3+ T cells/kg |
| Meij et al. ( | Direct isolation of CMV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 6 | 6/6 patients eliminated infection | 0.9 × 104–3.1 × 105 cells/kg |
| Cobbold et al. ( | Direct isolation of CMV-specific CD8+ T cells using MHC-I-tetramers | 9 | 8/9 patients eliminated infection | 1.2–33 × 103 cells/kg |
| Schmitt et al. ( | Direct isolation of CMV-specific CD8+ T cells using MHC-I-streptamers | 2 | Control of CMV-viremia in both patients | 0.37 and 2.2 × 105 cells/kg |
| Uhlin et al. ( | Direct isolation of CMV-specific CD8+ T-cells using MHC-I-pentamers | 5 | 4/5 responders | 0.8–24.6 × 104 cells/kg |
Clinical trials with therapeutic treatment of AdV-specific T cells.
| Reference | Method | No. pts | Results | Dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geyeregger et al. ( | 2 | 1/2 complete response | 104 CD3+ cells/kg | |
| 1/2 partial response | ||||
| Feuchtinger et al. ( | Direct isolation of AdV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 9 | 4/9 responders | 1.2–50 × 103 cells/kg |
| Qasim et al. ( | Direct isolation of AdV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 5 | 3/5 responders (cleared adenoviremia) | 104 cells/kg |
| Feucht et al. ( | Direct isolation of AdV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 30 | 21/30 responders | 0.3–24 × 103 CD3+ cells/kg |
| Uhlin et al. ( | Direct isolation of AdV-specific CD8+ T cells using MHC-I-pentamers | 1 | No response | 3.1 × 104 and 1.7 × 104 cells/kg |
Figure 6General workflow for adoptive therapy with CAR-modified T cells. Figure courtesy of Prof. Hinrich Abken.
Figure 7Structure of different generations of CARs. Figure courtesy of Prof. Hinrich Abken.
Figure 8.
Clinical trials with therapeutic treatment of EBV-specific T cells.
| Reference | Method | No. pts | Results | Dose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rooney et al. ( | 10 | Therapy: 3/3 responders | 0.2–1.2 × 108 cells/m2 | |
| Haque et al. ( | 8 | 4/8 Remission | 106 cells/kg | |
| Haque et al. ( | 33 | 14/33 complete remission | 2 × 106 cells/kg | |
| Heslop et al. ( | 114 | Therapy: 11/13 complete response | 1–5 × 107 cells/m2 | |
| Doubrovina et al. ( | DLI or | 19 | 13/19 complete response | 106 cells/kg |
| Gallot et al. ( | 11 | 4/10 responders | 5 × 106 cells/kg | |
| Moosman et al. ( | Direct isolation of EBV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 6 | 3/6 responders | 0.4–9.7 × 104 cells/kg |
| Icheva et al. ( | Direct isolation of EBV-specific CD8+ and CD4+ T cells using the CCS | 10 | 7/10 responders | 0.15–53.8 × 103 cells/kg |
| Uhlin et al. ( | Direct isolation of EBV-specific CD8+ T cells using MHC-I-pentamers | 1 | 1/1 complete response | 1.8 × 104 cells/kg |