| Literature DB >> 28279194 |
Dario Gerace1, Rosetta Martiniello-Wilks1,2, Najah Therese Nassif1, Sara Lal1,3, Raymond Steptoe4, Ann Margaret Simpson5.
Abstract
Due to their ease of isolation, differentiation capabilities, and immunomodulatory properties, the therapeutic potential of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) has been assessed in numerous pre-clinical and clinical settings. Currently, whole pancreas or islet transplantation is the only cure for people with type 1 diabetes (T1D) and, due to the autoimmune nature of the disease, MSCs have been utilised either natively or transdifferentiated into insulin-producing cells (IPCs) as an alternative treatment. However, the initial success in pre-clinical animal models has not translated into successful clinical outcomes. Thus, this review will summarise the current state of MSC-derived therapies for the treatment of T1D in both the pre-clinical and clinical setting, in particular their use as an immunomodulatory therapy and targets for the generation of IPCs via gene modification. In this review, we highlight the limitations of current clinical trials of MSCs for the treatment of T1D, and suggest the novel clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR) gene-editing technology and improved clinical trial design as strategies to translate pre-clinical success to the clinical setting.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical trials; Immunomodulation; Insulin-producing cells; Mesenchymal stem cells; Type 1 diabetes
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28279194 PMCID: PMC5345178 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-017-0511-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Summary of the major MSC-derived studies in pre-clinical animal models of T1D
| Treatment type | Intervention | Outcomes | Fresh/frozen | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immunomodulation | Mice received 1 × 106 AD-MSCs by i.p. injection | Reversal of hyperglycaemia characterised by increased serum insulin, amylin, and GLP-1 levels. Downregulation of the CD4+ Th1-based immune response and expansion of Tregs in the pancreatic lymph nodes. | Fresh | [ |
| Mice received 1 × 105 MSCs either i.p. or i.v. | Reduced infiltration of T cells to pancreatic islets associated with preferential migration of MSCs to pancreatic lymph nodes. | Fresh | [ | |
| Mice received 0.5 × 106 MSCs administered systemically | Reduced blood glucose levels and an increase in morphologically normal pancreatic islets. | Fresh | [ | |
| Rats received 2–4 × 106 MSCs via tail vein injection | Enhanced insulin secretion and sustained normoglycaemia. Islets from treated rats co-expressed high levels of | Fresh | [ | |
| Mice received a co-transplantation of primary hBMSCs and human islets at serial ratios under the kidney capsule | Good blood glucose control and increased levels of serum insulin and C-peptide when islets were co-transplanted with hBMSCs. hBMSCs also increased the percentage of Tregs and prevented cytokine-induced loss-of-function of transplanted islets. | Fresh | [ | |
| Mice received 5 × 105 MSCs injected i.v. once a week for 4 weeks | BALB/c-MSC trafficked to the pancreatic lymph nodes of treated animals. Administration of BALB/c-MSC temporarily resulted in reversal of hyperglycaemia in 90% of treated animals. | Fresh | [ | |
| IPC differentiation | Chemical differentiation | BMSCs formed islet-like clusters containing IPCs that expressed multiple pancreatic genes. The clusters released insulin in a glucose-dependent manner and ameliorated diabetes in STZ-treated nude mice. | Fresh | [ |
| Chemical differentiation | BMSCs differentiated into IPCs and acquired islet-like architecture after transplantation, developed an endocrine gene expression profile and demonstrated glucose-responsive insulin secretion. Subcapsular renal transplantation of these aggregates lowered circulating blood glucose levels. | Fresh | [ | |
| Chemical differentiation | Differentiated BMSCs expressed multiple pancreatic genes and exhibited glucose-responsive insulin secretion. Transplantation into STZ-diabetic mice imparted reversal of hyperglycaemia and an improved IPGTT. | Fresh | [ | |
| Chemical differentiation | Differentiation cells expressed pancreatic genes and displayed glucose-responsive insulin secretion. Transplantation of differentiated cells into diabetic rats reduced blood sugar levels. | Fresh | [ | |
| Viral-mediated differentiation | Differentiated cells expressed all four islet hormones and demonstrated glucose-responsive insulin secretion. Cell transplantation into STZ-diabetic immune-deficient mice resulted in further differentiation, including induction of | Fresh | [ | |
| Viral-mediated differentiation | hMSCs differentiated into IPCs that expressed multiple islet genes and released insulin/C-peptide in a weak glucose-responsive manner. Upon transplantation into STZ-diabetic mice, normoglycaemia was obtained within 2 weeks and maintained for at least 42 days. | Fresh | [ | |
| Viral-mediated differentiation | Differentiated AD-MSC expressed some islet genes and secreted increasing amounts of insulin in response to increasing concentrations of glucose. Transplantation in STZ-diabetic rats resulted in lowered blood glucose and higher glucose tolerance. | Fresh | [ | |
| Viral-mediated differentiation | Expression of | Fresh | [ | |
| Viral-mediated differentiation | Body weight in diabetic mice that received GFP-mMSCs expressing the human insulin gene was increased by 6% within 6 weeks after treatment. | Fresh | [ |
AD-MSC adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cell, BMSC bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell, CD cluster of differentiation, GFP green fluorescent protein, GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1, hBMSC human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell, i.p. intraperitoneal, IPC insulin producing cell, IPGTT intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test, i.v. intravenous, MSC mesenchymal stem cell, Pdx-1 pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1, STZ streptozotocin, T regulatory T cells, mMSC murine mesenchymal stem cell, BALB/c-MSC Bagg Albino mesencymal stem cells
Summary of the major clinical trials utilising MSCs as a treatment for T1D
| Trial number | Phase | Intervention | Outcomes | Fresh/frozen | Status | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01068951 | N/A | Intravenous, autologous transplantation of MSCs (approximately 2 × 106 cells/kg body weight) | Patients in the control arm showed losses in both C-peptide peak values and C-peptide when calculated as area under the curve during the first year. In MSC-treated patients, these responses were preserved or even increased. No side effects of MSC treatment were observed | Fresh | Completed 2014 | [ |
| NCT01374854 | 1/2 | 1 × 106/kg UC-MSCs are infused through the pancreatic artery along with BM-MNCs by interventional therapy and another same dose of UC-MSCs administered 1 week post-intervention | C-peptide increased 105.7% in 20 of 21 responders versus 7.7% decrease in control subjects. HbA1C decreased 12.6% in treated versus 1.2% increase in control subjects. Daily insulin requirements decreased 29.2% in treated versus no change in control subjects. | Fresh | Completed 2012 | [ |
| NCT00703599 | 1/2 | i.v. administration of autologous activated stromal vascular fraction derived from 100–120 ml lipoaspirates following mini-liposuction of abdominal adipose tissue | Not reported | Frozen | Estimated completion of 2009 | [ |
| NCT01219465 | 1/2 | i.v transfusion of UC-MSCs (2 × 107 cells/kg body weight) | No reported acute or chronic side effects in MSC-treated versus saline control. Both HbA1c and C-peptide in MSC-treated patients were significantly better than either pre-therapy values or saline control patients during the follow-up period | Fresh | Completed 2012 | [ |
| NCT01996228 NCT01350219 | 1/2 | Human UC-MSCs within the Stem Cell Educator device | A single treatment provided lasting reversal of autoimmunity that allowed regeneration of islet β cells and improvement of metabolic control in subjects with long-standing T1D | Fresh | Recruiting | [ |
| NCT02057211 | 2 | Transfusion of autologous MSC versus sham MSC transfusion vs placebo control | N/A | Fresh | Recruiting | N/A |
| NCT01143168 | 1 | Multiple transplantation of BM-MNC + UC-MSCs | Not reported | Frozen | Estimated completion of 2011 | Cellonis Biotech Pty Ltd. |
| NCT00646724 | 1/2 | Co-transplantation of islet allograft and MSC autograft | Not reported | Frozen | Estimated completion of 2012 | N/A |
| NCT01322789 | 1/2 | Four consecutive intravenous infusions, 1 week apart, followed by four consecutive infusions 1 month apart | Not reported | Frozen | Estimated completion of 2015 | N/A |
| NCT01496339 | 1/2 | 1 × 106/kg MenSCs are infused through the pancreatic artery or intravenously once a week in four consecutive therapies | Not reported | Frozen | Estimated completion of 2014 | S-Evans Biosciences Pty Ltd. |
| NCT02644759 | 1/2 | Transplantation of autologous CD34+/CD133+ cells into the pancreatic artery and capillaries via interventional radiology techniques. Immunomodulation by incubation of autologous UC-MSCs for 3–6 h, and return of autologous WBCs back via intravenous injection | N/A | Fresh | Ongoing, not recruiting | Stem Cells Arabia |
| NCT00690066 | 2 | Intravenous infusion of ex vivo cultured adult human MSCs vs placebo intravenous infusion of excipients of PROCHYMAL® | Not reported | Frozen | Completed 2014 | Osiris/Mesoblast International Sarl |
| NCT01157403 | 2/3 | Intravenous autologous transplantation of BMSC (approximately 2.5 × 106 cells/kg body weight) | Not reported | Frozen | Estimated completion of 2014 | N/A |
Clinical trial data was acquired from www.clinicaltrails.gov using the search terms “mesenchymal stem cells” and “type 1 diabetes”
BM-MNC bone marrow mononuclear cell, BMSC bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell, CD cluster of differentiation, HbA1C glycosylated haemoglobin, i.v. intravenous, MenSC menstrual blood mesenchymal stem cell, MSC mesenchymal stem cell, N/A not available, T1D type 1 diabetes, UC-MSC umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell, WBC white blood cell
Fig. 1CRISPR-mediated generation of IPC and enhanced MSC-derived immunotherapies. Expression of the nuclease-deficient dCas9 fused to a transcriptional activator in MSCs facilitates the activation of endogenous gene expression. To drive the differentiation of MSCs into IPCs (blue boxes), sgRNAs targeting the promoter of target genes such as Pdx-1, NeuroD1, MafA, etc., are delivered to MSCs expressing the dCas9-transcription activator fusion. Additional sgRNAs targeting the promoter of genes involved in MSC immunomodulation (red boxes) are delivered in combination to maintain the immunomodulatory phenotype of MSCs through multiple cell expansions for the development of therapeutic doses of cell therapy. CCL chemokine ligand, CXCR chemokine receptor, dCas9 nuclease-deficient CRISPR-associated protein 9, GCG glucagon, IDO indoleamine 2,3-deoxygenase, IFN interferon, IL interleukin, INS insulin, MafA v-maf musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma A, M-CSF macrophage colony stimulating factor, Neurod1 neuronal differentiation 1, Ngn3 neurogenin 3, Nkx6.1 NK6 homeobox 1, NOS nitric oxide synthase, Pdx1 pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1, sgRNA short guide RNA, SST somatostatin, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor
Fig. 2Clinical application of CRISPR for the treatment of T1D MSCs are isolated from a variety of adult tissue sources including bone marrow, adipose tissue, and dental pulp for ex vivo culture. MSCs are subsequently gene modified with the nuclease-deficient dCas9-transcriptional activator CRISPR complex and specific sgRNA for the desired purpose of either generating enhanced MSCs that maintain their immunomodulatory properties as an immunotherapy, or for the generation of IPCs. The generated therapy is subsequently administered to a trial participant either systemically (immunotherapy) or subcutaneously (IPCs) in an area conducive to vascularisation of the transplanted IPCs. CRISPR clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat, MSC mesenchymal stem cell, IPC insulin-producing cell