| Literature DB >> 30070053 |
Timothy E G Krueger1, Daniel L J Thorek2,3, Samuel R Denmeade3,4, John T Isaacs3,4, W Nathaniel Brennen3.
Abstract
The development of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) as cell-based drug delivery vectors for numerous clinical indications, including cancer, has significant promise. However, a considerable challenge for effective translation of these approaches is the limited tumor tropism and broad biodistribution observed using conventional MSCs, which raises concerns for toxicity to nontarget peripheral tissues (i.e., the bad). Consequently, there are a variety of synthetic engineering platforms in active development to improve tumor-selective targeting via increased homing efficiency and/or specificity of drug activation, some of which are already being evaluated clinically (i.e., the good). Unfortunately, the lack of robust quantification and widespread adoption of standardized methodologies with high sensitivity and resolution has made accurate comparisons across studies difficult, which has significantly impeded progress (i.e., the ugly). Herein, we provide a concise review of active and passive MSC homing mechanisms and biodistribution postinfusion; in addition to in vivo cell tracking methodologies and strategies to enhance tumor targeting with a focus on MSC-based drug delivery strategies for cancer therapy. Stem Cells Translational Medicine 2018;1-13.Entities:
Keywords: Cell size; Cell-based therapy; Drug delivery; Homing; In vivo cell tracking; Mesenchymal stem cell
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30070053 PMCID: PMC6127224 DOI: 10.1002/sctm.18-0024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Transl Med ISSN: 2157-6564 Impact factor: 6.940
Figure 1Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)‐based drug delivery strategies. The tumor tropism of MSCs can be exploited to deliver a wide variety of therapeutic agents for the treatment of cancer, such as apoptosis‐inducing agents, cytotoxic chemotherapy, anti‐angiogenic factors, immunomodulatory agents, oncolytic viruses, drug‐loaded nanoparticles/microparticles, and tissue‐ or tumor‐specific prodrugs.
Classes and examples of MSC‐based anti‐cancer agent drug delivery strategies
| Anti‐cancer strategy | Common agents | Mechanism of action | Advantages | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oncolytic viruses | Adenovirus; | Viruses infect, replicate in, and lyse tumor cells | Amplification of anti‐tumor effect with multiple rounds of infection; |
|
| Tumor‐ or tissue‐specific prodrugs | CD + 5‐5‐FU; | Cytotoxic drug metabolites induce cell death by inhibiting DNA synthesis (5‐FU, ganciclovir) or by inducing ER stress (thapsigargin) | Selective drug activation in tumor microenvironment |
|
| Immunomodulatory agents | IL‐2; | Lymphocyte activation and induction of tumor‐specific T‐cell responses; Direct induction of tumor cell differentiation and growth arrest | Endogenous signaling molecules; |
|
| Apoptosis‐inducing agents | TRAIL | Direct induction of apoptosis via death receptors | Currently in clinical trials; |
|
| Cytotoxic chemotherapy | Paclitaxel; | Induction of cell death via inhibition of microtubule depolymerization (paclitaxel) or topoisomerase II function (doxorubicin) | FDA‐approved |
|
Abbreviations: CD, cytosine deaminase; 5‐FU, 5‐fluoruracil; Hsv‐tk, herpes simplex virus‐thymidine kinase; PSA, prostate specific antigen; TRAIL, TNF‐related apoptosis‐inducing ligand.
Figure 2Mechanical barriers to MSC trafficking via systemic circulation. The large cell size of MSCs, particularly following ex vivo expansion, is a significant physical barrier that prevents efficient and complete dispersion through small vessels in the vascular network. This severely limits access of exogenously introduced MSCs to many target tissues, including tumors. Abbreviations: D, diameter; MSC, mesenchymal stem cell; V, volume.
Figure 3In vivo cell tracking of systemically‐infused 89Zr‐labeled human MSCs in a prostate cancer xenograft model. (A): X‐ray and μPET imaging documenting accumulation of the radiolabel in the liver and tumor (PC3) at 7 days post‐IV infusion. (B): Biodistribution of 89Zr‐labeled MSCs at 7 days post‐IV or ‐IC infusion determined by ex vivo scintigraphy. (C): Autoradiography detailing sub‐organ distribution of 89Zr‐labeled MSCs, confirming localization restricted to the tumor periphery. Abbreviation: μPET, microPET.
Advantages and disadvantages of common in vivo and ex vivo cell tracking methodologies
| Technique | Common imaging agents | Limit of detection | Depth of penetration | Spatial resolution | Temporal resolution | Useful applications advantages | Limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||||
| BLI | D‐luciferin/Firefly luciferase, Coelenterazine/Renilla luciferase | 10–10,000 cells (depending on tissue depth) | ∼3 cm (∼10‐fold loss of signal intensity per cm) | 50 μm | 1 min | Whole‐body imaging;Reporter enzyme expressed only inmetabolically activelive cells; Cheap; Ease of use | 2D image; Limited to small animal studies;Signal attenuation in deeper tissues; Signal quantitation not comparable across tissues; Susceptible to vascular disrupting agents |
|
| MRI | Ferumoxide;Ferumoxytol;Ferritin;Gd chelates | 1,000–10,000 cells (depending on imaging agent and instrumentation) | No limit | 100–200 μm | 1 min | Whole‐body imaging;Anatomical imaging;Ferritin reporter gene enables detection exclusively of live cells;Clinical integration | T2 hypointensity indistinguishablefrom tumor hemorrhage;False positives due to macrophage uptake;2D image; Label diluted with each cell division; Potential cytotoxicity and ROS generation; Sophisticated equipment and expertise needed |
|
| PET | 18F‐FDG;Hsv‐TK + 18F‐FDG;64Cu‐PTSM;89Zr;124I | 100–25,000 cells (depending on imaging agent and instrumentation) | No limit | 1–2 mm | 15 min | Whole‐body imaging; 3D imaging; Multiple radioisotopes and labeling chemistries available; Hsv‐TK reporter gene enables detection exclusively of live cells; Clinical integration | Use of radioisotopes;Hazardous transfection reagents; Potential false positives aftercell death/label efflux; Sophisticated equipment and expertise needed |
|
| In vivo microscopy | GFP;Vital dyes (DID/DiL/DiD/DiR);CFDA/CFSE | Single cell | 150–250 μm | Single cell | Video‐rate | Imaging in context of natural microenvironment;Visualization of dynamic processes(migration, vascular adhesion, TEM) | Limited to preselected areas with low required path length; Tissue exteriorization may influence MSC recruitment/retention; Tissue auto‐fluorescence; Sophisticated equipment and expertise needed |
|
| In vivo flow cytometry | GFP;Vital dyes (DID/DiL/DiD/DiR);CFDA/CFSE;PKH26 | 1–10 cells/mL | 150–250 μm | Single cell | Continuous | Enumeration of circulating cells; Tracking dynamic entry and exit from circulation; Detection of cell flow velocities;Analysis of large blood volume; No artifacts from cell isolation and processing | Quantification influenced by flow velocityand vessel size; Tissue auto‐fluorescence;Antibody labeling can lead to target cell depletion; Sophisticated equipment and expertise needed |
|
|
| ||||||||
| Histology | X‐gal/β‐gal;Prussian blue/Iron oxide | Single cell | N/A | Single cell | Single time point/sample | In situ visualization within contextual tissue structure | Loss of signal from gene silencing or cell division; Sampling bias |
|
| IHC | GFP/anti‐GFP;CFDA/anti‐fluorescein; PKH26; Vital dyes (DiI/DiL/DiD/DiR); Quantum dots;Fluc/anti‐FLuc | Single cell | N/A | Single cell | Single time point/sample | In situ visualization within contextual tissue structure | Loss of signal from gene silencing or cell division; Sampling bias; Tissue auto‐fluorescence;Potential transfer of membrane dyes |
|
| FISH | Y‐Chromosome;Alu sequences | Single cell | N/A | Single cell | Single time point/sample | In situ visualization within contextual tissue structure;No loss of signal | Sampling bias;Tissue auto‐fluorescence |
|
| Ex vivo flow cytometry | GFP | 1–10 cells/mL | N/A | Single cell | Single time point/sample | Enumeration of circulating cells | Potential artifacts from cell isolationand processing; Cell auto‐fluorescence;Sophisticated equipment and expertise needed |
|
| qRT‐PCR | Y‐Chromosome;Alu sequences | 1/600,000 cells (∼0.0002%) | N/A | Single cell | Single time point/sample | Quantification from whole tissue | Rare transcripts difficult to detect due to stochasticity of PCR amplification |
|
| ddPCR/BEAMing | Y‐Chromosome;Alu sequences | 1/10,000 cells (0.01%) | N/A | Single cell | Single time point/sample | Quantification from whole tissue; Identification of rare transcripts/cell populations | Sophisticated equipment and expertise needed |
|
| Scintigraphy | 111In‐oxine; 18F‐FDG;64Cu‐PTSM; 51Cr; 125I;99mTc‐HMPAO | Single cell (depending on labeling efficiency) | N/A | Single cell | Single time point/sample | Quantification from whole tissue | Use of radioisotopes |
|
Abbreviations: BLI, bioluminescence imaging; FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; Gd, gadolinium; Hsv‐tk, herpes simplex virus‐thymidine kinase; IHC, fluorescence imaging and immunohistochemistry; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PET, positron emission tomography; qRT‐PCR, quantitative real‐time PCR.