| Literature DB >> 32138309 |
Judith Behnke1, Sarah Kremer1, Tayyab Shahzad1, Cho-Ming Chao1,2, Eva Böttcher-Friebertshäuser3, Rory E Morty4, Saverio Bellusci2, Harald Ehrhardt1.
Abstract
Chronic lung diseases pose a tremendous global burden. At least one in four people suffer from severe pulmonary sequelae over the course of a lifetime. Despite substantial improvements in therapeutic interventions, persistent alleviation of clinical symptoms cannot be offered to most patients affected to date. Despite broad discrepancies in origins and pathomechanisms, the important disease entities all have in common the pulmonary inflammatory response which is central to lung injury and structural abnormalities. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) attract particular attention due to their broadly acting anti-inflammatory and regenerative properties. Plenty of preclinical studies provided congruent and convincing evidence that MSC have the therapeutic potential to alleviate lung injuries across ages. These include the disease entities bronchopulmonary dysplasia, asthma and the different forms of acute lung injury and chronic pulmonary diseases in adulthood. While clinical trials are so far restricted to pioneering trials on safety and feasibility, preclinical results point out possibilities to boost the therapeutic efficacy of MSC application and to take advantage of the MSC secretome. The presented review summarizes the most recent advances and highlights joint mechanisms of MSC action across disease entities which provide the basis to timely tackle this global disease burden.Entities:
Keywords: MSC; asthma; bronchopulmonary dysplasia; chronic lung disease; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; extracellular vesicles; idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; inflammation; lung injury; lung repair; mesenchymal stem cells
Year: 2020 PMID: 32138309 PMCID: PMC7141210 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9030682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Multiple lung repair and regenerative functions of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). Autologous or allogenic MSC from different rodent species and humans proved therapeutic efficacy in different preclinical lung disease models mostly studied in rodents. The graphic summarizes the multiple actions of MSC transplantation to the injured lung including cell transdifferentiation, secretion of paracrine factors, antimicrobial activity, immunomodulation, EV secretion, promotion of lung fluid clearance, nanotube formation and cell component transfer. MSC immunomodulation comprises T-cell, macrophage and NK cell function resulting in the augmented release of anti-inflammatory cytokines and beneficial factors, such as the inhibition of proteases as well as attenuation of pro-inflammatory cytokine releases. IL—interleukin; MCP-1—monocyte chemoattractant protein-1; MIP-2—macrophage inflammatory protein-2; CXCL—C–X–C motif ligand; TNF-α—tumor necrosis factor alpha; MMP—matrix metallopeptidase; ANGPT-1—angiopoietin 1; KGF—keratinocyte growth factor; HGF—hepatocyte growth factor; VEGFA—Vascular endothelial growth factor A; EGF—epidermal growth factor; NK—natural killer cell; Treg—regulatory t cell; Th—t helper cell; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; TGFß—transforming growth factor beta; PGE2—prostaglandin E2; IDO—indoleamine-pyrrole 2,3-dioxygenase NO—nitric oxide; LXA4—lipoxin A4; EV—extracellular vesicle.
Summary of important preclinical studies in rodents examining the efficacy of MSC to prevent/treat bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
| Experimental Lung Disease Model | Species | Cell Source | MSC Species | Dose | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated | Biological Function | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| hyperoxia | rat | UCB vs. AT vs. MNC | human | 5 × 105 | i.t. | d5 | no | UC MSC better preserve lung structure than AT or MNC MSC | higher HGF and VEGFA production in BM MSC, only BM MSC attenuate impaired angiogenesis, cell death induction, macrophage influx and pro-inflammatory cytokine production | [ |
| hyperoxia | rat | UCB | human | 5 × 105 | i.t. | d5 | no | reduction of lung inflammation | intratracheal application more efficient than intravenous injection | [ |
| hyperoxia | rat | BM | rat | 1 × 106 | i.t. | d7 | no | improved alveolarization and vascular density, reduced pulmonary hypertension | MSC from female donors stronger impact on vascular development, maybe the most potent MSC population for lung repair in severe BPD | [ |
| hyperoxia | mice | BM | human | 2.5 × 105 | i.t. | d4 | no | attenuated structural damage and lung fibrosis until adulthood | shift in macrophage populations towards an anti-inflammatory phenotype | [ |
| hyperoxia | mice | BM | mice | 5 × 104 | i.v. | d4 | no | cytoprotective effects and attenuation of lung injury | paracrine MSC reaction via the release of immunomodulatory factors to ameliorate the parenchymal and vascular injury | [ |
| hyperoxia | rat | BM | rat | 1 × 105 | i.t. | d4 | no | improved survival and exercise tolerance while attenuating alveolar and lung vascular injury and pulmonary hypertension | BM MSC prevent arrested alveolar and vascular growth in part through paracrine activity | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; BPD—bronchopulmonary dysplasia; UCB—umbilical cord blood-derived MSC; BM—bone marrow-derived MSC; AT—adipose tissue-derived MSC; MNC—umbilical cord blood mononuclear cells; d—day; HGF—hepatocyte growth factor; VEGFA—vascular endothelial growth factor A.
Summary of decisive preclinical studies in rodents examining the therapeutic potential of MSC to treat asthma.
| Experimental lung Disease model | Species | Cell Source | MSC Species | Dose | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated | Biological Function | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| house dust mite | mice | BM | mice | 1 × 106 | i.v. | d14 | no | reduced airway hyperresponsiveness | reduction of eosinophilia, Th2 response and activated dendritic cells | [ |
| ovalbumin | mice | BM | mice | 1 × 106 | i.v. | d19 | no | reduced pulmonary inflammation | reduced attraction of lymphocytes and eosinophils to the lung, suppression of lung dendritic cell maturation and Th2 response | [ |
| ovalbumin | mice | BM | mice | 1 × 106 | i.v. | d67 | no | combination therapy of MSC plus simvastatin potentiates anti-inflammatory effects and suppression of lung airway remodeling | reduced recruitment of neutrophils and eosinophils, goblet cell hyperplasia and lung fibrosis | [ |
| house dust mite | mice | BM | mice | 5 × 105 | i.v. | d27 | no | decreased airway responsiveness, reduced eosinophil and neutrophil influx, normalized lung function | MSC express high levels of COX, M2 macrophages high levels of IL-10 and TGF-β and low level of IL-6 | [ |
| ovalbumin | mice | UCB | human | 5 × 105 | i.v. | d14 | no | decreased airway hyperresponsiveness, inflammatory cell infiltration and Th2 cytokine production while percentage of Tregs was increased | MSC treatment reduces allergic inflammation, which could be mediated by regulatory T cells | [ |
| ovalbumin | mice | BM vs. | mice | 1 × 105 | i.t. | d22 | no | reduction of lung parenchymal inflammation and inflammatory profile of alveolar macrophages | therapeutic efficiency only after treatment with BM MSC | [ |
| ovalbumin | rat | PD | human | 1 × 106/kg | i.v. | d7 | no | inflammatory cell infiltration and goblet cell hyperplasia were markedly decreased | shift from Notch-1, -2 and jagged-1 to Notch-3, -4 and delta-like ligand-4 signaling | [ |
| ovalbumin | mice | iPSC vs. | human | 1 × 106 | i.v. | d0 (iMR90-iPSC) + | yes | inhibition of inflammatory cell infiltration and mucus production, reduction in eosinophil infiltration, and a decrease in inflammatory cell infiltration | iPSC-MSC same therapeutic effect as BM MSC | [ |
| ragweed | mice | BM | mice | n.a. | i.v. | d14 | no | inhibition of eosinophil infiltration, decreased levels of Th2 cytokines and immunoglobulins, IL-4 and/or IL-13 activate the STAT6 pathway in the BMSCs resulting in an increase of their TGF-β production | BM MSC suppress Th2-driven allergic responses by TFG- β production | [ |
| house dust mite | mice | BM | mice | 1 × 105 | i.t. | d22 | no | reducing levels of IL-4, IL-13, and eotaxin, increased mRNA expressions of TGF-β1, IFN-γ, IL-10, TSG-6, IDO-1, and IL-1RN and induced M2 macrophage polarization | reduction of inflammation and remodeling, as well as improvement in lung function | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; MSC—mesenchymal stromal cell; UCB—umbilical cord blood-derived MSC; BM—bone marrow-derived MSC; AT—adipose tissue-derived MSC; PD—placenta-derived MSC; iPSC—induced pluripotent stem cells; d—day; IL—interleukin; COX—cyclooxygenase; TGF-ß—transforming growth factor beta; IFN-y—interferon gamma; TSG-6—tumor necrosis factor-inducible gene 6 protein; IDO-1—indolamin-2,3-dioxygenase; Th2—t helper cell type 2.
Summary of key preclinical studies in rodents on the treatment of acute lung injury with MSC.
| Experimental lung Disease Model | Species | Cell Source | MSC Species | Dose | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated | Biological Function | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LPS | rat | BM | rat | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 4 h p.i. | no | reduction of lung edema | RNA interference against KGF abrogated the MSC effect | [ |
| Klebsiella | mice | (PαS) BM | mice | 1 × 106 | i.v. | 4 h p.i. | no | reduced alveolitis and lung edema | attenuated neutrophil, T cell and dendritic cell influx | [ |
| Pseudomonas aeruginosa | mice | AT | mice | 1 × 105 vs. | i.t. | 1 h p.i. | no | reduced inflammation, neutrophil accumulation, bacterial burden and lung injury | protective effects only be achieved at high dose instillation, inhibition of prostaglandin E2 production by IGF-1, improved bacterial properties and phagocytosis activity in macrophages | [ |
|
| rat | BM | human | 1 × 107 vs. | i.v. | 30 min p.i. | no | intratracheal application as effective as intravenous application, reduced efficiency of cryopreserved cells, | increased macrophage phagocytosis capacity and LL-37 secretion | [ |
| Influenza | mice | BM | human | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 5 d p.i. | no | reduced impairment of alveolar fluid clearance and attenuated lung injury | effects were mediated by infected cells’ release of soluble factors that down-regulate the sodium and chloride transporters | [ |
| Influenza | mice | BM | mice | 1 × 105 | i.v. | 30 min p.i. | no | reduced lung injury, pro-inflammatory cytokine production, inflammatory cell recruitment and lung edema | reduction of JNK and ERK phosphorylation | [ |
|
| mice | BM | human | 1 × 106 | i.v. vs. | 4 h p.i. | no | beneficial effects centrally exerted by enhanced alveolar macrophage phagocytosis which is stipulated by mitochondria transfer via nanotube structures | macrophage depletion abolished the beneficial MSC effects, i.v. route could be more beneficial | [ |
|
| rat | BM | human | 1 × 107/kg | i.v. | 30 min p.i. | no | reduction in bacterial load and lung inflammation, attenuated lung injury, potential to enhance epithelial wound repair | CD362+ MSC account for the therapeutic efficiency | [ |
| influenza | mice | UCB vs. | human | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 5 d p.i. | no | improved outcome for umbilical cord MSC compared to BM MSC | umbilical cord MSC improved growth factor release of ANGPT-1 and HGF | [ |
|
| mice | BM | mice | 75 × 104 | i.t. | 4 h p.i. | no | down-regulation of proinflammatory responses, reducing TNF-α and MIP-2 and increasing the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 | BM MSC decrease the severity of endotoxin-induced ALI and improve survival | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; i.n.—intranasal; p.i.—post infection; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; ALI—acute lung injury; UCB—umbilical cord blood-derived MSC; BM—bone marrow -derived MSC; (PαS) BM—double positive PDFGRα+ SCA1+ bone marrow-derived MSC; h—hours; min—minutes; d—day; KGF—keratinocyte growth factor; IGF—Insulin-like growth factor; ANGPT-1—angiopoietin 1; TNF-α—tumor necrosis factor alpha; MIP-2—macrophage inflammatory protein-2; IL—interleukin; JNK—c-JUN-N-terminal kinase; ERK—extracellular signal-regulated kinase.
Summary of important preclinical studies in rodents studying the therapeutic potential of MSC for COPD.
| Experimental Lung Disease Model | Species | Cell Source | MSC Species | Dose | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated | Biological Function | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| cigarette smoke | rat | BM | rat | 6 × 106 | i.t. | beginning 7th week | yes | alleviated airway inflammation and edema | downregulated COX2 and prostaglandin E production suggested to be mediated by inhibition of p38 and ERK MAP kinase activity in macrophages | [ |
| elastase | mice | BM | mice | 1 × 105 | i.t. | 3 h p.i. | yes | reduced inflammation and collagen fiber content, improved VEGFA secretion and lung mechanics | only the repeated application one week apart reduced neutrophil counts and T cell pathology resulting in attenuation of pulmonary arterial hypertension | [ |
| cigarette smoke | rat | BMC vs. | rat | 6 × 106 | i.v. | 6 month a.t. | no | BMC and MSC increased pulmonary vascularity, cell proliferation and number of small vessels. BMC reduce apoptotic cell death, attenuate mean pulmonary arterial pressure and muscularization | BMC better induced proliferation of AT2 cells and pulmonal vascular endothelial cells, BM MSC and BMC both alleviate emphysema. | [ |
| elastase | rat | AT | rat | 5 × 107 | local (PGAF) | 1 week a.t. | no | enhancement of compensatory growth, restoration of pulmonary function, alveolar and vascular regeneration | selective delivery of HGF by AT MSC with alveolar regenerative and angiogenic effects | [ |
| papain | rat | BM | rat | 4 × 106 | i.v. | 2 h a.t. | no | protective effect on pulmonary emphysema by secretion of reparative growth factors | BM MSC increase VEGF-A expression by TNF-α release with inhibition of apoptosis | [ |
| elastase | mice | WJ | human | 5 × 104 | i.v. | 7 d a.t. | no | reduced degree of alveolar emphysema | WJ MSC deliver pulmonary regenerative effect, pathomechanism not investigated | [ |
| elastase | mice | LT | mice | 5 × 104 | i.t. | 21 d a.t. | no | partially restored lung elasticity and alveolar architecture | activation of HGF/c-Met system, by promoting survival and proliferation of alveolar epithelial cells | [ |
| cigarette smoke | mice | AT | human vs | 3 × 105 | i.v. | during last 8 weeks of treatment | yes | reduced inflammatory infiltration, decreased cell death and airspace enlargement and restored weight loss | AT MSC abrogated the phosphorylation of p38 MAPK and attenuated JNK1 and AKT1 activities, murine and human ASC have same effects | [ |
| elastase | mice | BM vs | mice | 1 × 105 | i.v. vs. | 3 h a.t. | no | BM, AT and LT MSCs decreased mean linear intercept, neutrophil infiltration, and cell apoptosis, increased elastic fiber content, reduced alveolar epithelial and endothelial cell damage | decreased keratinocyte-derived chemokine and TGF-β levels in all sources, i.v. administration of BM MSC with better cardiovascular function and phenotype change from M1 to M2 | [ |
| elastase or | mice | AT | human | 1 × 105 | i.v. | 7 d a.t. vs. | no | improved alveolar regeneration | AT MSC decrease mean linear intercept and reduce caspase-3 activity | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; a.t.—after treatment; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; COPD—chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; BM—bone marrow-derived MSC; AT—adipose tissue- derived MSC; BMC—bone marrow-derived mononuclear cells; PGAF—polyglycolic acid felt sheet; WJ—whartons’s jelly-derived MSC; LT—lung tissue-derived MSC; h—hours; d—day; COX2—cyclooxygenase-2; ERK—extracellular signal-regulated kinase; MAP—mitogen-activated protein kinase; HGF—hepatocyte growth factor; VEGF-A—vascular endothelial growth factor A; TNF-α—tumor necrosis factor alpha; ATII—alveolar epithelial type II; JNK1—c-Jun N-terminal kinase 1; AKT1—AKT serine/threonine kinase 1; TGF-ß—transforming growth factor beta.
Summary of important preclinical studies in rodents on the therapeutic efficacy of MSC to treat Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis.
| Experimental Lung Disease Model | Species | Cell Source | MSC Species | Dose | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated | Biological Function | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| bleomycin | mice | BM | mice | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 1 d vs. | no | lung fibrosis and inflammation inhibited to greater degree in day 3 and 6, later administration of BM MSC engraftment more effective | decreased MMP9, TIMP-1, IFN-γ and TGF-β activity | [ |
| bleomycin | mice | AT | mice | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 1 d a.t. | no | AT MSC from aged mice are inefficient to attenuate disease pathology | AT MSC from young mice inhibit MMP-2, IGF receptor and AKT activation | [ |
| bleomycin | mice | AT | human | 4 × 107/kg BW | i.v. | 3,6,9 d a.t. | yes | increased survival, reduced collagen deposition, immunomodulation and anti-fibrotic effect in early stage of disease | suppression of profibrotic and inflammatory gene transcripts | [ |
| bleomycin | mice | BM | human | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 2 d a.t. | no | reduced pulmonary fibrosis and improved lung function | suppression of total T cell and CD4+ T cell infiltration, pro-inflammatory cytokine production and fibrotic changes | [ |
| bleomycin | mice | AT | mice | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 1 d a.t. | no | attenuation of lung fibrosis | inhibition of mir-199-3p and AKT phosphorylation, preservation of caveolin-1 expression | [ |
| bleomycin | mice | BM | mice | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 7 d a.t. | no | reduction of inflammation and collagen deposition | response to injury, adopt an epithelium-like phenotype, and reduce inflammation and collagen deposition, replacing alveolar epithelial type II cells, reduced expression of MMP2 and MMP9 | [ |
| bleomycin | rat | BM | rat | 1 × 106 | i.v. | 4 d a.t. | no | reduced lung injury and fibrosis, lower neutrophilic infiltration and collagen deposition | down-regulation of IL-1β, TGF-β VEGF, IL-6, TNF-α, and NOS | [ |
| bleomycin | mice | BM | mice | 5 × 105 | i.v. | n.a. | no | protection of lung injury | Secretion of high levels of IL1RN, to antagonize the function of IL-1α and block production of TNF-α from activated macrophages | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; a.t.—after treatment; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; ALI—acute lung injury; BPD—bronchopulmonary dysplasia; COPD—chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; BM—bone marrow-derived MSC; AT—adipose tissue-derived MSC; BW—birth weight; d—day; n.a. —not applicable; MMP—matrix metallopeptidases; TIMP-1—tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1; IFN-γ—interferon gamma; TGF-β—transforming growth factor beta; AKT—AKT serine/threonine kinase; IL—interleukin; VEGF—vascular endothelial growth factor; TNF-α—tumor necrosis factor alpha; NOS—nitric oxide synthase; IL1RN—interleukin 1 receptor antagonist.
Summary of selected preclinical studies in rodents aiming to improve the therapeutic efficacy of MSC by genetic modification.
| Disease Entity | Experimental Lung Disease Model | Cell Source | MSC Modification | MSC Species | Dose (Cells) | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated Application | Biological Function In Vivo | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALI | LPS | BM | FGF2 overexpression | mice | 5 × 106 | i.v. | 1 h p.i. | no | FGF2 overexpression better preserves lung structure and pulmonary edema | MSC overexpressing FGF2 better attenuate pro-inflammatory cytokine and MPO secretion and neutrophil infiltration | [ |
| ALI | LPS | BM | CXCR4 overexpression | rat | 1 × 106 | i.v. | 1 h p.i. | no | reduced lung injury score and lung edema | enhanced mobilization and chemotaxis of MSC, increased VEGFA secretion and reduced lung inflammation | [ |
| ALI | LPS | BM | β-catenin overexpression | mice | 5 × 105 | i.t. | 4 h p.i. | no | improvements in alveolar epithelial barrier integrity and lung structure impairment | better MSC retention in the lung and AEC II transdifferentiation with higher levels of KGF and IL-10 and reduced IL-1β | [ |
| ALI | LPS | BM | siRNA against claudin-4 | human | 1 × 106 | i.p. | n.a. | no | Claudin-4 promotes alveolar fluid clearance | hypoxic MSC preconditioning stipulates claudin-4 secretion | [ |
| ALI | LPS | BM | MSC transfected with shRNA against VEGFA | rat | 5 × 106 | i.v. | 5 h p.i. | no | attenuated anti-inflammatory properties and beneficial effects on lung injury | transfected MSC reduced the proinflammatory cytokine IL-1 | [ |
| ALI | LPS | BM | shRNA HGF transfection | rat | 5 × 106 | i.v. | 5 h p.i. | no | partial abrogation of MSC effects, MSC retention in the lung was not influenced, MSC restores lung permeability and lung injury | HGF-expressing character is required for MSC to protect the injured lung | [ |
| ALI | LPS | AM | Nrf2 transfected MSC | human | 1 × 106 | i.v. | 4 h p.i. | no | reduced inflammation, epithelial cell injury and fibrosis | increased cell retention in the lung, more efficient differentiation into type II cells with higher SPC content | [ |
| ALI |
| UCB | IL-10 transgentic MSC | human | 1 × 107/kg | i.v. | 1 h p.i. | no | increased therapeutic efficiency of transgenic MSC which only prohibited all aspects of lung injury including gas exchange | enhanced macrophage function via prostaglandin E2 and lipoxygenase A4 | [ |
| ALI | LPS | BM | transduction with heme oxygenase-1 | rat | 5 × 105 | i.v. | 2 h p.i. | no | improved survival rates, reduced lung inflammation and structural changes | superior prosurvival, antiapoptotic and paracrine functions | [ |
| BPD | hyperoxia | BM | shRNA stromal cell-derived factor-1 | rat | 1 × 106 | i.t. | d7 | no | reduction of beneficial MSC effects on alveolarization and angiogenesis | SDF-1 from MSC exerts anti-inflammatory and angiogenesis promoting activities | [ |
| asthma | ovalbumin | BM | erythropoietin gene modified MSC | mice | n.a. | i.v. | d20 | no | more efficient inhibition of all disease driving pathologies | maybe related with the downregulation of TGF-β1-TAK1-p38MAPK pathway activity | [ |
| COPD | elastase | BM | VEGFA overexpression | mice | n.a. | i.v. | 14 d a.t. | no | Improved attenuation of emphysema compared to naïve MSC | Increased tissue expression of VEGFA, Nrf 2 and superoxide dismutase | [ |
| COPD | elastase | BM | shRNA HGF knockdown | human | 0,1 vs. | i.v. | 6 h vs. | no | MSC cell therapy more efficient than conditioned medium, higher doses and mid to delayed application better reduces collagen deposition and anti-inflammatory effects | anti-inflammatory, antifibrotic and antiapoptotic effects mediated partially through HGF | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; i.p.—intraperitoneal; p.i.—post infection; a.t.—after treatment; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; ALI—acute lung injury; BPD—bronchopulmonary dysplasia; COPD—chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; UCB—umbilical cord blood-derived MSC; BM—bone marrow -derived MSC; AM—amniotic-derived MSC; h – hours; d—day; n.a.—not applicable; FGF2—fibroblast growth factor 2; MPO—myeloperoxidase; VEGFA—vascular endothelial growth factor A; AEC II—alveolar epithelial cells type II; KGF—keratinocyte growth factor; IL—interleukin; HGF—hepatocyte growth factor; SDF-1—stromal cell-derived factor 1; TGF-ß—transforming growth factor beta; TAK1—transforming growth factor beta-activated kinase 1; p38MAPK—P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase; NRF 2—Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2.
Summary of relevant preclinical studies in rodents intended to improve the therapeutic efficacy by MSC preconditioning.
| Disease Entity | Experimental Lung Disease Model | Cell Source | MSC Modification | MSC Species | Dose (Cells) | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated Application | Biological Function In Vivo | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALI | endotoxin | BM | hypoxia | human | 5 × 104 cells/g | i.v. | n.a. | no | ischemic preconditioning potentiates the protective effect of through the secretion of exosome | less neutrophil influx and pro-inflammatory cytokine dysbalance with upregulation of IL-10 | [ |
| ALI | CLP | BM | preconditioning with carbon monoxide | mice | 5 × 105(2 h) | i.v. | 2 h, 24 h, 48 h p.i. | yes | increased survival and alleviated lung injury | preconditioning stipulates the production of proresolving lipid mediators, especially resolvins | [ |
| ALI |
| BM | MSC pretreatment with Toll-like receptor-3 agonist | human | 2 × 107 vs. | i.v. | 1 h p.i. | no | reduced pulmonary edema and bacterial load | increased antimicrobial activity of macrophages after application of pretreated EV | [ |
| asthma | dust mite | BM | pretreatment of MSC with eicosapentaenoic acid | mice | 1 × 105 | i.t. | 1 d a.t. | no | reduced bronchoconstriction and lung tissue remodeling | reduced influx of eosinophils, macrophages, neutrophils and lymphocytes, shift towards anti-inflammatory macrophages and increased release of inflammation resolving and anti-inflammatory mediators | [ |
| COPD | elastase, cigarette smoke | AT | preconditioning with pioglitazone | human | 1 × 105 | i.v. | 7 d a.t. | no | more efficient repair of lung injury | increased VEGFA production | [ |
| COPD | elastase | AM | MSC predifferentiation to lung epithelial like progenitor cells | mice | 1 × 105 | i.t. | 2 weeks a.t. | no | improved lung regeneration, reduced presence of inflammatory and lung remodeling factors | integration of predifferentiated cells into lung alveolar structures | [ |
| IPF | bleomycin | BM | oncostatin M preconditioning | mice | 2 × 105 | i.t. | 3 d a.t. | no | improved attenuation of inflammation, TGF-β1 and OSM induced extracellular matrix production, release of fibrotic factors | upregulation of paracrine HGF | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; p.i.—post infection; a.t.—after treatment; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; ALI—acute lung injury; COPD—chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; IPF—idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; BM—bone marrow-derived MSC; AT—adipose tissue-derived MSC; AM—amniotic-derived MSC; CLP—cecal ligation and puncture; h—hours; d—day; EV—extracellular vesicles; n.a.—not applicable; IL—interleukin; VEGFA—vascular endothelial growth factor A; HGF—hepatocyte growth factor; TGF-ß1—transforming growth factor beta 1; OSM—oncostatin M.
Summary of relevant preclinical studies in rodents intended to improve the therapeutic efficacy of MSC by co-treatment with drugs.
| Disease Entity | Experimental Lung Disease Model | Cell Source | MSC Modification | MSC Species | Dose (Cells) | Application Route | Time Point of Application | Repeated Application | Biological Function In Vivo | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPD | hyperoxia | BM | combined treatment with erythropoetin | mice | 1 × 106 | i.v. | 1 h before + | yes | improved airway structures and body weight | augmented cytoprotection | [ |
| BPD | hyperoxia | PD | MSC plus surfactant | human | 1 × 105 | i.t. | d5 | no | application of surfactant partially attenuates the beneficial impact on lung histology | surfactant inhibits MSC viability and impairs the reduction of hyperoxia induced increase in mean linear intercept | [ |
| asthma | ovalbumin | BM | erythropoietin gene modified MSC | mice | n.a. | i.v. | d20 | no | more efficient inhibition of all disease driving pathologies | maybe related with the downregulation of TGF-β1-TAK1-p38MAPK pathway activity | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; BPD—bronchopulmonary dysplasia; BM—bone marrow-derived MSC; PD—placenta-derived MSC; h—hours; d—day, TGF-β1—transforming growth factor beta 1; TAK1—transforming growth factor beta-activated kinase 1; p38MAPK—P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase.
Decisive preclinical studies in rodents to evaluate EV from MSC as alternative treatment option to conventional MSC application.
| Disease Entity | Experimental Lung Disease Model | Source of EV | EV Modification | EV Species | EV dose (MSC Cell Equivalent) | Application Route | Time Point of EV Application | Repeated EV Application | Biological Function In Vivo | Molecular Changes/Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALI |
| BM vs | - | human | 3 × 106 vs. | i.t. | 4 h p.i. | no | increased survival, MV as effective as MSC | increased KGF release, decreased influx of inflammatory cells, pro-inflammatory cytokine release and pulmonary edema, attenuation of bacterial load | [ |
| ALI | LPS ( | AT | - | human | 1 × 106 | i.v. | 30 min p.i. | no | only EV from young donor MSC alleviated lung injury | macrophages are less prone to internalization of EV from aged MSC | [ |
| ALI |
| BM | antagomir of miR-145 | human | 9 × 106 | i.v. | 4 h p.i. | no | EV and MSC decrease lung injury, efficient bacterial clearance depends on high levels of leukotriene B4 | controlled by miR-145 enhanced LTB4 production and antimicrobial activity through LTB4/BLT1 signaling | [ |
| BPD | hyperoxia | WJ vs | - | human | 0.5 × 106 | i.v. | d4 | no | reduction of alveolar and vascular remodeling and lung fibrosis same for WJ and BM EV | shift from pro-inflammatory M1 macrophage status to anti-inflammatory M2 status | [ |
| BPD | hyperoxia | UCB | siRNA VEGF-knockdown | human | 5 × 105 | i.t. | d14 | no | EV similar effective in reduction of impairments in alveolarization and vasculogenesis | knockdown of VEGFA abolished the beneficial effects, EV were internalized into type II cells, fibroblasts and pericytes, but into endothelial cells | [ |
| BPD | hyperoxia | UCB + | TSG-6 siRNA knockdown | human | 0.7x106 | i.p. | d2 + d4 | yes | EV similar effectiveness in reduction of lung, heart and brain pathology | knockdown of TSG-6 abrogated the beneficial effects | [ |
| BPD | hyperoxia | UCB | - | human | 6 × 106 | i.t. | d3, d7, d10 | yes | only EV, but not MSC prevented an increase in medial thickness in small pulmonary arteries | further studies required for mechanism of action | [ |
| asthma | ovalbumin | AT | - | human | 1 × 105 | i.v. | d47 (1d after last challenge) | no | superiority of EV compared to MSC with respect to pro-inflammatory mediators and inflammatory cell infiltration, but similarly reduced eosinophils, collagen fiber content and levels of TGF-β | further studies required for mechanism of action | [ |
i.v.—intravenous; i.t.—intratracheal; i.p.—intraperitoneal; p.i.—post infection; MSC—mesenchymal stem cell; ALI—acute lung injury; BPD—bronchopulmonary dysplasia; UCB—umbilical cord blood-derived MSC; BM—bone marrow-derived MSC; AT—adipose tissue- derived MSC; AM—amniotic-derived MSC; WJ—whartons’s jelly-derived MSC; LF—lung fibroblasts; h—hours; min—minutes; d—day; EV—extracellular vesicles; miR-145—microRNA 145; LTB4—leukotriene B4; KGF—keratinocyte growth factor; VEGFA—vascular endothelial growth factor A; TGF-ß—transforming growth factor beta.