| Literature DB >> 31214185 |
Daniel J Weiss1, Karen English2, Anna Krasnodembskaya3, Johana M Isaza-Correa4, Ian J Hawthorne2, Bernard P Mahon4.
Abstract
Rapid progress is occurring in understanding the mechanisms underlying mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC)-based cell therapies (MSCT). However, the results of clinical trials, while demonstrating safety, have been varied in regard to efficacy. Recent data from different groups have shown profound and significant influences of the host inflammatory environment on MSCs delivered systemically or through organ-specific routes, for example intratracheal, with subsequent actions on potential MSC efficacies. Intriguingly in some models, it appears that dead or dying cells or subcellular particles derived from them, may contribute to therapeutic efficacy, at least in some circumstances. Thus, the broad cellular changes that accompany MSC death, autophagy, pre-apoptotic function, or indeed the host response to these processes may be essential to therapeutic efficacy. In this review, we summarize the existing literature concerning the necrobiology of MSCs and the available evidence that MSCs undergo autophagy, apoptosis, transfer mitochondria, or release subcellular particles with effector function in pathologic or inflammatory in vivo environments. Advances in understanding the role of immune effector cells in cell therapy, especially macrophages, suggest that the reprogramming of immunity associated with MSCT has a weighty influence on therapeutic efficacy. If correct, these data suggest novel approaches to enhancing the beneficial actions of MSCs that will vary with the inflammatory nature of different disease targets and may influence the choice between autologous or allogeneic or even xenogeneic cells as therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: extracellular vesicles; apoptosis; autophagy; cell therapy; efficacy; mesenchymal stromal cell; mitochondria
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31214185 PMCID: PMC6557974 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Scheme for how the necrobiology of MSCs influences therapeutic efficacy Putative mechanisms include: as live cells through paracrine mechanisms, and through the cellular processes associated with morphological, biochemical, and molecular changes which predispose, precede, and accompany cell death. These necrobiotic processes include the response to dying and non-necrotic MSCs, the alteration of MSC biology by autophagy, and the delivery of MSC derived mitochondria or EVs to target cells and tissues.
Pre-clinical lung injury studies utilizing dead or apoptotic MSCs.
| Acute Lung Injury | Mouse | Syngeneic Mouse BM | Improved survival | None specified | Apoptotic MSC, 3T3 fibroblasts | ( |
| Acute Lung Injury | Mouse | Xenogeneic Primary human umbilical cord MSC | Decreased mortality, histological injury (3d), BAL TNFa, MIP-2, IFNγ (3d), Th1 CD4 T cells | Non-specified soluble mediators | Apoptotic MSCs (mitomycin C treated) | ( |
| Asthma | Mouse ovalbumin-induced acute allergic airways inflammation | Allogeneic Mouse (FVB) BM | Decreased histological injury, BAL total cells (especially Eosinophils & Macrophages), BAL IL-4, IL-13, splenocyte IL-4 recall | None (paracrine) | PFA-fixed MSC | ( |
| Sepsis | Mouse cecal ligation and puncture | Syngeneic & allogeneic Mouse BM | Improved survival and organ function | LPS and TNFα-stimulated MSC stimulated macrophages produced IL-10 through cell-cell contact and iNOS-dependent release of PGE2 | Whole bone marrow, heat-killed MSC, skin fibroblasts | ( |
Selected studies of MSC-derived exosomes in human models.
| PBMC co-culture | Bone marrow (healthy donors) | ND | Ultracentrifugation and precipitation | Suppressed TNF-a & IL-1b but increased anti-inflammatory factor TGF-b | ( |
| PBMC co-culture | Bone marrow (healthy donors) | ND | Ultracentrifugation | Increased Treg/Teff ratio and IL-10 concentration in culture medium | ( |
| Monocyte-derived macrophages | Bone marrow (healthy donors) | ND | Ultracentrifugation | Suppressed pro-inflammatory cytokine production, increased M2 macrophage marker expression, and augmented phagocytic capacity of human monocyte derived macrophages in non-contact cultures | ( |
| Isolated human pulmonary artery endothelial cells | Umbilical cord | ND | S200 size-exclusion chromatography, differential centrifugation and ultracentrifugation | Regulated STAT3-mediated signaling | ( |
| Human umbilical cord vein endo- thelial cells (HUVECs) | Bone marrow (healthy donors) | 1,927 proteins identified | Differential centrifugation, filtration and ultracentrifugation | Proteomic analysis of proteins contained in exosomes released by MSC under ischemic like conditions. Mostly proteins such as platelet, epidermal or fibroblast derived growth factors, as well as proteins from nuclear factor-kappaB (NFkB) signaling pathway | ( |
| HUVEC & human breast carcinoma-derived cell lines | Bone marrow (healthy donors) | miRNA-100 | Differential centrifugation, filtration and ultracentrifugation | Decreased expression of VEGF in breast cancer-derived cells by modulating the mTOR/HIF-1α signaling axis | ( |
| Comparative study | Bone marrow (healthy donors) | 730 proteins identified in microvesicles | Sucrose cushion centrifugation & ultracentrifugation | Proteomic analysis identified proteins involved in cell proliferation, adhesion, migration, and morphogenesis | ( |
Studies showing the influence of inflammatory environment on human MSC-derived exosome cargo.
| TNF-α + IFN-γ overnight | Human bone marrow derived MSC | ICAM 1, CXCL12, and CCL5. 11 miRNAs with direct or indirect immunomodulatory function | Tangential flow filtration | Stimulated MSC EVs increased anti-inflammatory response through COX2/PGE2 pathway modulation | ( |
| TNF-α + IFN-γ overnight | Human bone marrow derived MSC | ND | Tangential flow filtration | Improved mechanical sensitivity in rat spinal cord injury model | ( |
| TGF-β, IFN-γ, or TGF-β + IFN-γ for 72 h | Human umbilical cord derived MSC | Exosomes from MSC treated with TGF-β and IFN-γ contained more IFN-γ, IL-10, and IDO | Centrifugation and PEG6000 | EV from MSCs treated with TGF-β and IFN-γ induced Tregs differentiation | ( |