| Literature DB >> 29895311 |
Nigel Farrow1,2,3,4, Patricia Cmielewski5,6,7, Martin Donnelley5,6,7, Nathan Rout-Pitt5,6,7, Yuben Moodley8, Ivan Bertoncello9, David Parsons5,6,7,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Airway disease is a primary cause of morbidity and early mortality for patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). Cell transplantation therapy has proven successful for treating immune disorders and may have the potential to correct the airway disease phenotype associated with CF. Since in vivo cell delivery into unconditioned mouse airways leads to inefficient engraftment, we hypothesised that disrupting the epithelial cell layer using the agent polidocanol (PDOC) would facilitate effective transplantation of cultured stem cells in mouse nasal airways.Entities:
Keywords: Airways; Gene therapy; Stem cells; Transplantation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29895311 PMCID: PMC5998543 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-018-0911-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1LV-LacZ reporter gene expression at an MOI of 10 in (a) hABCs and (b) hAECs. c In vitro LacZ transduction efficiency for hABCs compared with hAECs. ****P < 0.0001, t test, n = 3. d Luciferase reporter gene expression (circular region of interest) in hAEC cultures after LV-Luc vector treatment at an MOI of 10 shows that the cells were successfully transduced prior to use in the in vivo studies. Scale bars = 20 μm. Abbreviations: hABC human airway basal cell, hAEC human amnion epithelial cell, LV-LacZ HIV-1–based LV vectors expressing nuclear-localised LacZ under transcriptional control of the MPSV promoter, MOI multiplicity of infection
Fig. 2Histological images of the anterior mouse nose 2 or 24 h after PDOC treatment only; the septum (NS) separates the treated (left) and untreated control (right, solid black arrowheads) nasal airways. Regions of epithelial cell loss (black arrows), the presence of cell debris (open arrows), and a loss of basal cells and basal lamina integrity (open arrowheads) are apparent. Scale bars = 0.2 mm. Panels b and c are an enlargement of a; e and f are an enlargement of d. Panels a, b, d, and e are all H&E-stained; c and f are cytokeratin 5–stained serial sections from (b) and (e), respectively. Abbreviations: H&E haemotoxylin and eosin, NS not significant, PDOC polidocanol
Fig. 3Luc expression was detected for at least 21 days in three out of seven mice that received hABC-Luc 2 h after the PDOC treatment (**P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 two-way analysis of variance, Sidak’s multiple comparison, n = 7–10/group). Abbreviations: hABC-Luc luciferase-transduced human airway basal cells, PBS phosphate-buffered saline, PDOC polidocanol
Fig. 4Bioluminescence in vivo imaging of hABC-Luc delivery revealed luciferase reporter gene expression in the nasal airways of three polidocanol (2 h conditioning)–treated mice and a PBS control mouse at 1 week and 3 weeks after delivery. Abbreviations: hABC-Luc luciferase-transduced human airway basal cells, PBS phosphate-buffered saline
Fig. 5There was no significant difference in Luc reporter gene expression in the nasal airways at either 1 or 3 weeks after (a) hABC-Luc or (b) hAEC-Luc delivery 24 h after PDOC disruption, compared with PBS (not significant, two-way analysis of variance, Sidak’s multiple comparison, n = 5/group). Abbreviations: hABC-Luc luciferase-transduced human airway basal cells, hAEC-Luc luciferase-transduced human amnion epithelial cells, PBS phosphate-buffered saline, PDOC polidocanol, Ph/sec photons per second