| Literature DB >> 30761298 |
Patrizio Mancuso1,2, Swarna Raman1, Aoife Glynn1, Frank Barry1,2, J Mary Murphy1,2.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is an inflammatory condition still lacking effective treatments. Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) have been successfully employed in pre-clinical models aiming to resurface the degenerated cartilage. In early-phase clinical trials, intra-articular (IA) administration of MSCs leads to pain reduction and cartilage protection or healing. However, the consistent lack of engraftment indicates that the observed effect is delivered through a "hit-and-run" mechanism, by a temporal release of paracrine molecules. MSCs express a variety of chemokines and cytokines that aid in repair of degraded tissue, restoration of normal tissue metabolism and, most importantly, counteracting inflammation. Secretion of therapeutic factors is increased upon licensing by inflammatory signals or apoptosis, induced by the host immune system. Trophic effectors are released as soluble molecules or carried by extracellular vesicles (ECVs). This review provides an overview of the functions and mechanisms of MSC-secreted molecules found to be upregulated in models of OA, whether using in vitro or in vivo models.Entities:
Keywords: chondroprotection; immunomodulation; mesenchymal stem cells; osteoarthristis; paracrine action; secretome
Year: 2019 PMID: 30761298 PMCID: PMC6361779 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Proposed mechanism of action for tissue repair by endogenous MSCs.
The MSC secretome and OA/cartilage protection.
| Anti-apoptosis | STC-1, | Rehman et al., |
| Anti-fibrosis | bFGF, AMD, HGF | Li et al., |
| Tissue metabolism | TIMP-1, TIMP-2 | Lozito and Tuan, |
| Chondrogenesis | TSP2 | Jeong et al., |
| Immunosuppression | PGE2 | Aggarwal and Pittenger, |
| Immunosuppression | TSG-6 | Mindrescu et al., |
| Anti-apoptosis | ECVs | Liu et al., |
| Immunosuppression | ECVs | Mokarizadeh et al., |
| Chondrogenesis | ECVs | Zhu et al., |
| Chondroprotective/ anti-inflammatory effects | ECVs | Cosenza et al., |
Figure 2Representation of the immunomodulatory effects of apoptotic MSCs.