| Literature DB >> 31205939 |
Weiping Lin1,2, Linfeng Huang1, Ying Li1, Bin Fang1, Gang Li2,3, Leilei Chen1, Liangliang Xu1,4.
Abstract
Stem cell-based therapies exhibit profound therapeutic potential for treating various human diseases, including cancer. Among the cell types that can be used for this purpose, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are considered as promising source of stem cells in personalized cell-based therapies. The inherent tumor-tropic property of MSCs can be used to target cancer cells. Although the impacts of MSCs on tumor progression remain elusive, they have been genetically modified or engineered as targeted anticancer agents which could inhibit tumor growth by blocking different processes of tumor. In addition, there are close interactions between MSCs and cancer stem cells (CSCs). MSCs can regulate the growth of CSCs through paracrine mechanisms. This review aims to focus on the current knowledge about MSCs-based tumor therapies, the opportunities and challenges, as well as the prospective of its further clinical implications.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31205939 PMCID: PMC6530243 DOI: 10.1155/2019/2820853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Favoring effect of MSCs on tumors.
| Author | MSC origin | Tumor model | MSC: tumor cell ratio | Outcomes | Mechanisms |
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| Chaturvedi P et al. [ | Human bone marrow-derived MSCs | Breast( MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-43) | 1:1 coinjection | Increased metastasis | activation of the hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) |
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| Walter, M. et al. [ | Human adipose stromal cells (ASCs) | Human breast cancer cell line MCF-7 | 1:1 coinjection | Increased migration and invasion | Secretion of IL-6 |
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| Tsai, Kuo–Shu et al. [ | Human bone marrow-derived MSCs | Human colorectal cancer cell line HT-29 | 1:100 coinjection | Promoted tumor sphere formation and tumor initiation | IL-6 secreted by MSCs signaled through STAT3 |
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| Zhang, Ting et al. [ | Human fetal bone marrow stem cells (hBM-MSCs) | 4T1 mouse mammary tumor cell line | 1:1 coinjection | Increased tumor growth | Neovascularization (secretion of macrophage |
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| El-Haibi, Christelle P. et al. [ | Human bone marrow-derived MSCs | MDA-MB-231 and MCF7/Ras breast cancer cells | 1:1 coinjection | Enhanced metastasis | Increased de novo production of lysyl oxidase (LOX) |
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| Patel, Shyam A. et al. [ | Human bone marrow-derived MSCs | Highly aggressive MDA-MB-231 breast adenocarcinoma, low-invasive MCF-7 breast adenocarcinoma, T47D breast adenocarcinoma, P815 murine mastocytoma | 1:1 (T47D and MSCs 2 × 105 /ml each) were added in 500 | Protected breast cancer cells from immune clearance | Through Tregs, inhibited NK cell and CTL functions |
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| Chandler, Emily M. et al. [ | Human adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) | MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 | 1:1 co-injection | Promoted tumorigenesis and angiogenesis | Bidirectional signaling; |
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| Gonzalez, Maria E. et al. [ | Human breast cancer metastatic sites-derived MSCs | Breast cancer cell lines MDA-MB-231, MCF7, and MDA-MB-436 | MSCs were orthotopically injected into the mammary fat pads (1 × 106 cells/mouse) | Loss of DDR2 in MSCs impaired their ability to promote DDR2 phosphorylation in BC cells, as well as | Reduced migration and metastasis |
Inhibitory effect of MSCs on tumors.
| Author | MSC origin | Tumor model | MSC: tumor cell ratio | Outcomes | Mechanisms |
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| Ho, Ivy AW et al. [ | Human bone marrow-derived MSCs | Primary human glioma cells | 1:1 (coinjection) | Reduction in tumor volume and vascular density | Secretion of soluble factors inhibiting endothelial progenitor cells recruitment and impaired tumor angiogenesis |
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| Leng, Liang et al. [ | Human umbilical cord-derived MSCs | Human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 | 1:1 (injection of MDA-MB-231 first, injection of MSCs 13 days later) | Antitumor effect | Inhibited tumor angiogenesis and induced cell apoptosis |
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| Meleshina, Aleksandra V. et al. [ | Human bone marrow-derived MSCs | MDA-MB-231 human breast adenocarcinoma cell line | 1:1 (MDAMB-231-Turbo FP650 cells injection fist, injection of MSCs 10 days later) | Suppressed tumor growth and lung metastasis | Reduced proliferative activity of cancer cells |
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| Dasari, Venkata Ramesh et al. [ | Human umbilical cord blood-derived MSCs | Two high-grade human glioma cell lines (SNB19 and U251) and two xenograft cell lines (4910 and 5310) | 1:4 (MSCs injection 7 days after tumor implantation) | Inhibited tumor growth | Upregulation of phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) in tumors induced cellular death through decreasing XIAP expression |
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| Xie, Chan et al. [ | Human bone marrow-derived MSCs (interferon beta (IFN- | HCC cell lines HepG2 and Huh7 | 300:1 (MSC injection 3 days after HCC inoculation) | Inhibition of HCC proliferation | Inhibition of AKT/FOCO3a pathway |
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| Wu, Ning et al. [ | Human umbilical cords-derived MSCs (transfection of hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 | Liver cancer cell lines HepG2 and SK-Hep-1 | 1:5 (MSC injection 24 h after tumor implantation) | Inhibited HCC proliferation and invasion | Downregulation of Wnt/ |
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| François, Sabine et al. [ | MSCs from human or rat bone marrow | Colorectal cancer cell lines (HT29, HCT-116, LS513, and CC531) | N/A | Attenuation of tumor progression | Modulation of immune component |
Figure 1The primary tumor microenvironment. Cancer cells in primary tumors are surrounded by a complex microenvironment that consists of numerous cells, including endothelial cells of the blood vessel, cancer-associated fibroblast, lymphocytes, neutrophil, MSCs, macrophages, cancer stem cells, and pericytes. Solid tumors contain a significant fraction of microregions that are chronically or transiently hypoxic, in which HIF-1 associated signaling pathway is activated, thus inducing the expression of various downstream genes, including VEGF and SDF-1.
Effects of MSCs-derived exosomes on tumors.
| Author | Exosome origin | Tumor model | Outcomes | Mechanisms |
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| Li, Hongdan et al. [ | Human bone marrow MSCs from patients undergoing hip-replacement surgery | Colon cancer cells (HCT-116, HT-29, and SW-480) | Increased the population of colon cancer stem cells | miR-142-3p in exosomes promoted the Notch signaling pathways by downregulating Numb |
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| Zhang, Yanling et al. [ | Human omental adipose-derived MSCs from cancer-free female donors | Human EOC cell lines (SKOV3, A2780, and HO-8910) | Promoted cancer progression | Affect proteomic profile of tumor cells via paracrine mechanism |
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| Roccaro AM et al. [ | Human bone marrow MSCs from normal or cancer patients | Multiple myeloma (MM) cells | MM BM-MSCs–derived exosomes promoted MM tumor growth, normal BM-MSC exosomes inhibited the growth of MM cells | Impact MM cell adhesion |
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| Makiko Ono et al. [ | Human bone marrow MSCs | BM2 cells | Slowed tumor growth | Exosomal |
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| Reza AM et al. [ | Human adipose MSCs | A2780 and SKOV-3 ovarian cancer cells | Inhibited proliferation of ovarian cancer cells | Upregulates proapoptotic molecules |
Figure 2Strategies of targeted-cancer therapy. MSCs have been utilized as vehicles to deliver anticancer treatments due to their tumor-tropic property. Genetically modified MSCs expressing suicide genes (e.g., TK gene) have been used to treat cancer effectively in vitro and in vivo through inducing cell death. Additionally, MSCs can be induced to express anticancer proteins (e.g., IL-2 or IFN-β), to generate prodrug activating enzymes or to deliver oncolytic viruses and the active drug for tumor-targeting. Simultaneously, MSCs-derived exosomes also suppressed tumor growth.