| Literature DB >> 30013600 |
Mengyuan Wang1, Quan Yuan1, Liang Xie1.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are multipotent stem cells characterized by self-renewal, production of clonal cell populations, and multilineage differentiation. They exist in nearly all tissues and play a significant role in tissue repair and regeneration. Additionally, MSCs possess wide immunoregulatory properties via interaction with immune cells in both innate and adaptive immune systems, leading to immunosuppression of various effector functions. Numerous bioactive molecules secreted by MSCs, particularly cytokines, growth factors, and chemokines, exert autocrine/paracrine effects that modulate the physiological processes of MSCs. These invaluable virtues of MSCs provide new insight into potential treatments for tissue damage and inflammation. In particular, their extensive immunosuppressive properties are being explored for promising therapeutic application in immune disorders. Recently, clinical trials for MSC-mediated therapies have rapidly developed for immune-related diseases following reports from preclinical studies declaring their therapeutic safety and efficacy. Though immunotherapy of MSCs remains controversial, these clinical trials pave the way for their widespread therapeutic application in immune-based diseases. In this review, we will summarize and update the latest research findings and clinical trials on MSC-based immunomodulation.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30013600 PMCID: PMC6022321 DOI: 10.1155/2018/3057624
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
The function of MSCs in mediating immune cells both in innate and adaptive immune systems.
| Immune cell type | MSC functions |
|---|---|
| Innate immune systems | |
| DCs | Inhibiting DC migration, activation, differentiation, maturation, and endocytosis |
| NK cell | Inhibiting NK cell migration, proliferation, differentiation, maturation, and activation |
| Macrophage | Activating M2 macrophage polarization in general; activating M1 macrophage polarization in specific microenvironment |
|
| |
| Adaptive immune systems | |
| T cell | Inhibiting T-cell survival proliferation, differentiation, maturation, and activation, while accelerating T-cell recruitment |
| B cell | Inhibiting B-cell proliferation, differentiation, maturation, chemotaxis, and activation |
Biological function of soluble factor secreted by MSCs.
| Soluble factors | Biological function |
|---|---|
| IDO | Suppressing proliferation and effect of immune cells |
| TSG6 | Anti-inflammatory effect |
| NO | Suppressing proliferation and modulation of T cell, promoting apoptosis of immune cells |
| IL-10 | Suppressing apoptosis of immune cells |
| CCL2 | Suppressing activation and migration of TH17 cells, promoting migration of monocyte |
| PGE2 | Suppressing generation and migration of TNF, proliferation of T cell, and cytolytic activity of NK cell |
Clinical trials using mesenchymal stem cells (registered as of October 26, 2017).
| Indication | Number of studies |
|---|---|
|
|
|
| Multiple sclerosis/atherosclerosis | 31 |
| Type 1 diabetes | 18 |
| Crohn's disease | 22 |
| Systemic lupus (erythematosus/colitis) | 11 |
| Rheumatoid arthritis/Sjögren's syndrome | 7 |
| Buerger's disease/sickle cell disease | 3 |
| HIV | 2 |
| Limbus corneae insufficiency syndrome | 1 |
| Periodontitis | 5 |
| Progressive hemifacial atrophy | 2 |
| Retinitis pigmentosa | 3 |
|
|
|
| GvHD | 41 |
| Hematopoietic malignancies | 3 |
All values have been extracted from https://clinicaltrials.gov/.
Figure 1The clinical trial distribution of MSC-based immunomodulation in the world. Up to now, most of the clinical trials using MSCs for treating inflammatory or autoimmune diseases have been conducted in the China, US, and Europe. All values have been extracted from https://clinicaltrials.gov/.