| Literature DB >> 30687760 |
Jingjing Kang1, Li Zhang2, Xiao Luo3, Xiangyu Ma1, Gaoying Wang1, Yanhui Yang1, Yongmin Yan1, Hui Qian1, Xu Zhang1, Wenrong Xu1, Fei Mao1.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) therapy has been applied to a wide range of diseases with excessive immune response, including inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), owing to its powerful immunosuppression and its ability to repair tissue lesions. Different sources of MSCs show different therapeutic properties. Engineering managements are able to enhance the immunomodulation function and the survival of MSCs involved in IBD. The therapeutic mechanism of MSCs in IBD mainly focuses on cell-to-cell contact and paracrine actions. One of the promising therapeutic options for IBD can focus on exosomes of MSCs. MSCs hold promise for the treatment of IBD-associated colorectal cancer because of their tumor-homing function and chronic inflammation inhibition. Encouraging results have been obtained from clinical trials in IBD and potential challenges caused by MSCs therapy are getting solved. This review can assist investigators better to understand the research progress for enhancing the efficacy of MSCs therapy involved in IBD and CAC.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30687760 PMCID: PMC6327253 DOI: 10.1155/2018/9652817
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1The major active procedure of adaptive immune response involved in IBD. CD4+T cells diverted into diverse phenotype under the stimulus of the pathogenic factors and then secreted proinflammatory or anti-inflammatory to exert different disease effects.
The therapeutic effect of different source of MSCs in experimental IBD and CAC with different engineering treatments.
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| 1 | M-ADMSCs | macrophages | IP | ↓ mortality and weight loss, inflammatory cytokines | [ |
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| 2 | H-GMSCs | Acetylsalicylic Acid | ↓ disease phenotypes | [ | |
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| 3 | M-BMMSCs | Aspirin | IV | ↓DAI and colonic inflammation | [ |
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| 4 | H-UCB-MSCs | DNA methyltransferase | ↑ therapeutic effect of MSCs | [ | |
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| 5 | R-BMMSCs | G-CSF | IV | ↓ DAI, MPO activity, serum TNF-a and NF- | [ |
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| 6 | H-ADMSCs | HCB platelet lysate | enema | ↓ colitis scores, inflamed area and inflammatory mediators. | [ |
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| 7 | M-BMMSCs | Heparin | IV | ↓ mortality,weight loss, inflammation reaction and tissue injury | [ |
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| 8 | H-UCMSCs | IFN- | IV | ↓ the ease of body weight,↑ colon length, ↓DAI, and↑ small intestine tissues structure | [ |
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| 9 | M-BMMSCs | Inhibition of Gal-3 | IP | ↑ therapeutic potential | [ |
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| 10 | M-BMMSCs | Insulin-like Growth Factor Binding Protein 7 | IV and IP | ↓ clinical and histopathological severity | [ |
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| 11 | H-BMMSCs | knocking down let-7a | IV | ↑ therapeutic potential | [ |
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| 12 | H-BMMSCs | low doses of ultraviolet radiation and X-rays | ↑ the effect of radiotherapy in CRC | [ | |
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| 13 | M-BMMSCs | MicroRNA Let-7a Knockdown | IV | ↓ mortality, ↓ weight loss,↓ inflammation reaction,↓ tissue lesion | [ |
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| 14 | R-ADMSCs | miR-1236 knock down | enema | ↓ inflammation markers | [ |
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| 15 | Microvesicles M-BMSCs | miR-200b overexpression | IV | ↑ the colon fibrosis histologically | [ |
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| 16 | M-BMMSCs | miR-21 Knockdown | IV | ↑ colonic inflammation in a TGF-b1-dependent manner | [ |
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| 17 | R-BMMSCs | Over-expression CXCR4 | IV | ↓ both clinical and microanatomical severity of colitis | [ |
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| 18 | H-UCMSCs | Poly (I:C) | IP | ↑ clinical and pathological manifestations | [ |
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| 19 | M-BMMSCs | Poly(I:C) | IP | ↓ the pathologic severity | [ |
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| 20 | H-UCMSCs | poly(I:C) and LPS | IP | ↓ clinical signs of disease, colon shortening and histological disease | [ |
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| 21 | R/H-BMMSCs | melatonin | IV | ↑ therapeutic effect | [ |
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| 22 | M-BMMSCs | spheroid formation | Intraluminal | ↓ body weight loss and ↓ DAI | [ |
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| 23 | H-BMSCs | Spheroidal formation | IP | simplify long-distance transportation and ↑ therapeutic application | [ |
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| 24 | BMMSCs | transfect with sodium iodide symporter | IV | ↓ tumor growth and ↑ overall survival | [ |
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| 25 | R-BMMSCs | Tregs | IV | ↓clinical and histopathologic severity | [ |
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| 26 | M-BMMSCs | Tregs cell | IV | ↑ body weight and ↑ colon morphology | [ |
M, mouse; H, human; R, rat; IP, intraperitoneal injection; IV, intravenous injection; NEC, necrotising enterocolitis.
The therapeutic theory of different sources of MSCs.
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| ↑ Treg cells | ↑ Treg cells | ↑ Treg cells | ↑ Treg cells | ↓CD3+T cells | ↓Macrophage | ↑ Treg cells |
| ↑ Th2 cells | ↑ Th2 cells | ↑ Th2 cells | ↑ Th2 cells | (↑apoptosis | (M1→M2) | ↑ Th2 cells |
| ↓ Th1 cells | ↓ Th1 cells | ↓ Th1 cells | ↓ Th1 cells | ↓proliferation) | ↓ Neutrophils | ↓ Th1 cells |
| ↓ Th17 cells | ↓ Th17 cells | ↓ Th17 cells | ↓ Th17 cells | ↓ Th17 cells | ||
| ↓Macrophage (M1→M2) | ↓Macrophage | regulate tight junction proteins | ↓CD3+T cells | ↑ COXs | ||
| ↓ Neutrophils | (M1→M2) | ↓ monocyte | (↑apoptosis | |||
| ↑ MDSCs | ↓oxidative stress | ↓CD3+T cells activation | ↓proliferation) | |||
| ↓CD3+T cells | ↓cell senescence | ↓ Neutrophils | ||||
| (↑apoptosis ↓proliferation) | ↑wound repair | ↑ CD5+ B cells | ||||
| ↓oxidative stress | ↑ CD5+ Bregs | |||||
| ↓cell senescence | ||||||
| ↓mucosal permeability | ||||||
| ↑neuroprotective |
MDSCs: myeloid derived suppressor cells.
Figure 2MSCs in IBD and CAC mainly aim to suppress overactive immune responses by cell-to-cell contact and paracrine action. A: MSCs can integrate into intestinal mucosa by the differentiation of intestinal epithelial cells, then format vascular endothelial cells and matrix cells to restore intestinal wall parclose. B: The immunosuppressive effect of MSCs on IBD is mainly owing to paracrine function which secreted different cytokines to inhibit inflammation. MSCs also can secrete exosomes to the intestinal mucosa to inhibit inflammation.
Figure 3Signaling pathways involved in the IBD therapy of MSCs. Signaling pathways are not independent but relevant and cooperate with each other closely in IBD.
Figure 4Exosomes are the medium of intercellular material. transport and signal transduction.
CLINICAL data of representative MSCs therapy for IBD from Pubmed in the past decade.
| Sources | Disease | Therapeutic schedule | Phase | Number | Evaluation | Outcome | Reference | |
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| 1 | Allogeneic- | UC | a single dose of | II | 44 | 24 months | 34 (72.7%) of patients achieved the clinical | [ |
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| 2 | Allogeneic- | Perianal fistulizing CD | a single dose of | III | 212 | 24 weeks | 50% of patients treated with ADMSCs achieved combined remission. | [ |
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| 3 | Allogeneic- | Perianal fistulizing CD | a single dose intralesionally | II | 24 | 24 weeks | 69.2% of patients achieved the number of draining fistulas↓ | [ |
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| 4 | Allogeneic- | Perianal fistulizing CD | a single dose of 1 × 107, | II | 21 | 6, 12, and 24 weeks | no severe adverse events. | [ |
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| 5 | Allogeneic-MSCs | Luminal CD | a single dose of | II | 16 | 42 days | 15 patients CDAI score ↓ from 370 to 203 at day 42 | [ |
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| 6 | Autologous-BMMSCs | Luminal CD | two doses of | I | 10 | 0, 6 weeks | 3 patients CDAI score ↓ at 6 weeks | [ |
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| 7 | Autologous-ADMSCs | Perianal fistulizing CD | local injection,2×107 | I | 12 | 24 weeks | 9 of 12 patients had complete clinical healing by 3 months, | [ |
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| 8 | Autologous-ADMSCs | Perianal fistulizing CD | group 1: 1 × 107 cells/ml. After 4 weeks, if safe, | I | >9 | 8 weeks | 2 patients in group 2 showed complete healing | [ |
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| 9 | Autologous-BMMSCs | CD | a single dose of | I | 12 | 2 weeks | Single infusion of BMMSCs propagated ex vivo | [ |
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| 10 | Autologous-ADMSCs | Perianal fistulizing CD | 3 × 107 cells per centimeter length | II | 43 | 8 weeks | 27/33 patients (82%) had complete fistula healing. | [ |