| Literature DB >> 31212734 |
Hassan Mansoor1,2,3, Hon Shing Ong4,5, Andri K Riau6, Tisha P Stanzel7, Jodhbir S Mehta8,9,10,11, Gary Hin-Fai Yam12,13.
Abstract
The corneal functions (transparency, refractivity and mechanical strength) deteriorate in many corneal diseases but can be restored after corneal transplantation (penetrating and lamellar keratoplasties). However, the global shortage of transplantable donor corneas remains significant and patients are subject to life-long risk of immune response and graft rejection. Various studies have shown the differentiation of multipotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) into various corneal cell types. With the unique properties of immunomodulation, anti-angiogenesis and anti-inflammation, they offer the advantages in corneal reconstruction. These effects are widely mediated by MSC differentiation and paracrine signaling via exosomes. Besides the cell-free nature of exosomes in circumventing the problems of cell-fate control and tumorigenesis, the vesicle content can be genetically modified for optimal therapeutic affinity. The pharmacology and toxicology, xeno-free processing with sustained delivery, scale-up production in compliant to Good Manufacturing Practice regulations, and cost-effectiveness are the current foci of research. Routes of administration via injection, topical and/or engineered bioscaffolds are also explored for its applicability in treating corneal diseases.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; corneal regeneration; exosomes; immunomodulation; inflammation; mesenchymal stem cells
Year: 2019 PMID: 31212734 PMCID: PMC6627168 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20122853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Overview of human cornea and its pathological opacification. Transparent cornea is composed of corneal epithelium, Bowman’s membrane, corneal stroma, Descemet’s membrane and corneal endothelium. Corneal pathologies (e.g., infection, ulcer, injuries) lead to corneal opacification, which is conventionally treated by surgical removal and donor corneal transplantation (penetrating and lamellar keratoplasties).
Figure 2Major MSC sources in human tissues. MSCs can be harvested from (1) fetal/neonatal birth-associated tissues, including placenta (amnion, chorion, decidua), umbilical cord and cord blood; (2) adult tissues, including the rich source of bone marrow, peripheral blood, adipose tissue and limited source from hair follicle, dental tissue, skeletal muscle, etc.; and (3) in vitro conversion from pluripotent cells.
Figure 3Different approaches of corneal regenerative medicine. Various clinical conditions, including infections, inflammation, traumatic and chemical injuries, age-related degenerations, genetic disorders and corneal dystrophies, can compromise corneal functions by depleting and/or damaging different corneal cells, leading to visual deterioration. Corneal regenerative therapy by primary cell cultivation, transdifferentiation of non-ocular cell sources, and through mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes (MSC-Exo) is gaining importance. The cultivated healthy cells can be delivered to patients either by direct cell injection or by seeding them on carrier scaffolds followed by transplantation to restore corneal functions.
An overview of studies reporting MSC differentiation to corneal cell types. Abbreviations: MSC, mesenchymal stem cells; CK3, cytokeratin3; CK12, cytokeratin12; Kera, keratocan; Lum, lumican; MET, mesenchymal-epithelial transition; GSK3, glycogen synthase kinase 3; TGFβ, transforming growth factor beta; KS, keratan sulfate; ALDH, aldehyde dehydrogenase; TSG-6, tumor necrosis factor-α stimulated gene/protein 6.
| Corneal Tissues | MSC Source | In Vitro Study and Outcomes | In Vivo Study and Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Rabbit bone marrow | Co-culture with rabbit limbal stem cells, or in conditioned media induced CK3 expression. | Transplantation in fibrin gel to rabbit corneal epithelial defect caused by alkali injury reformed corneal epithelium with CK3 expression. | [ |
| Rat bone marrow | Co-culture with rat corneal stromal cells resulted in CK12 expression. | Transplantation on amnion to rat corneal epithelial deficiency model after alkali injury showed differentiation to epithelial-like cells with CK12 expression. | [ | |
| Human bone marrow | - | Transplantation on amnion to rat epithelial defect model after alkali injury inhibited corneal inflammation and angiogenesis; however, CK3 was not detected. | [ | |
| Human adipose | Culture in corneal epithelium conditioned media induced CK3 and CK12 expression. | - | [ | |
| Human adipose | MET by GSK3 and TGFβ inhibition downregulated mesenchymal genes and up-regulated epithelial genes (E-cadherin, cytokeratins and occludin). | Transplantation of MET cells on fibrin gel to rat total limbal stem cell deficiency model showed expression of human CK3, 12 and E-cadherin on rat corneal surface (unpublished). | [ | |
| Mouse bone marrow | - | Intrastromal injection to Kera knockout murine model expressed human Kera and cells assumed keratocyte phenotype without immune or inflammatory response. | [ | |
|
| Rabbit adipose | - | Application on a polylactic-co-glycolic acid scaffold to mechanically induced rabbit stromal defect induced differentiation to Kera and ALDH3A1 expressing cells. | [ |
| Human bone marrow | Culture in keratocyte conditioned medium to express keratocyte markers (ALDH1A1, Lum and Kera). | - | [ | |
| Human adipose | Culture in reduced serum condition with insulin and ascorbate induced the expression of stromal matrix components (Kera, KS, ALDH3A1). | - | [ | |
| Human dental pulp | Culture in keratocyte differentiation medium induced Kera and KS proteoglycan expression. | Intrastromal injection to mouse corneal stroma did not affect corneal transparency and absence of immune rejection, with production of stromal ECM components (human type-1 collagen and Kera). | [ | |
| Human periodontal ligament | Induction by growth factors in stromal environment generated CSK-like cells. Intrastromal injection to porcine corneas followed by organ culture showed human CD34, ALDH3A1, Kera and Lum expression. | - | [ | |
| Human corneal stromal stem cells | Pellet culture in serum-free condition induced Kera, KS and ALDH3A1 expression. | Intrastromal injection to Lum knockout murine corneas re-expressed human Kera and Lum, and corneal transparency was improved. | [ | |
|
| Human umbilical cord | Differentiation in medium containing GSK3β inhibitors induced the expression of Na+K+ATPase. | Cell injection to rabbit bullous keratopathy model improved corneal thickness and transparency with Na+K+ATPase expression. | [ |
Figure 4Illustration showing the paracrine signaling mechanism of MSCs. Exosomes are packaged within multivesicular bodies of MSC. The fusion with the plasma membrane results in their release from parental cells via exocytosis. The cargo content of exosomes is diverse in nature and contains lipids, proteins, as well as nucleic acids. Exosomes mediate their effects in the recipient cells by direct fusion and releasing their content into the cytosol, through ligand–receptor signaling, or entering the recipient cells via phagocytosis.
Figure 5Illustration of sustained delivery of exosomes for the treatment of corneal scarring and neovascularization. The biodegradable hydrogel, placed on the bare stroma, provides first-line protection for the encapsulated exosomes from proteolytic degradation and allows sustained release of the exosomes as it gradually degrades over a period of time.