| Literature DB >> 32661867 |
Suchi Gupta1, Vishnu Krishnakumar1, Yashvi Sharma1, Amit Kumar Dinda2, Sujata Mohanty3.
Abstract
The recent pandemic situation transpired due to coronavirus novel strain SARS-CoV-2 has become a global concern. This human coronavirus (HCov-19) has put the world on high alert as the numbers of confirmed cases are continuously increasing. The world is now fighting against this deadly virus and is leaving no stone unturned to find effective treatments through testing of various available drugs, including those effective against flu, malaria, etc. With an urgent need for the development of potential strategies, two recent studies from China using Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) to treat COVID-19 pneumonia have shed some light on a potential cure for the COVID-19 infected patients. However, MSCs, despite being used in various other clinical trials have always been questioned for their tendency to aggregate or form clumps in the injured or disease microenvironment. It has also been reported in various studies that exosomes secreted by these MSCs, contribute towards the cell's biological and therapeutic efficacy. There have been reports evaluating the safety and feasibility of these exosomes in various lung diseases, thereby proposing them as a cell-free therapeutic agent. Also, attractive features like cell targeting, low-immunogenicity, safety, and high biocompatibility distinguish these exosomes from other synthetic nano-vesicles and thus potentiate their role as a drug delivery nano-platform. Building upon these observations, herein, efforts are made to give an overview of stem cell-derived exosomes as an appealing therapeutic agent and drug delivery nano-carrier. In this review, we briefly recapitulate the recent evidence and developments in understanding exosomes as a promising candidate for novel nano-intervention in the current pandemic scenario. Furthermore, this review will highlight and discuss mechanistic role of exosomes to combat severe lung pathological conditions. We have also attempted to dwell into the nano-formulation of exosomes for its better applicability, storage, and stability thereby conferring them as off the shelf therapeutic.Entities:
Keywords: Drug delivery; Immuno-modulation; Lung diseases; Nano-formulation; Therapeutics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 32661867 PMCID: PMC7357441 DOI: 10.1007/s12015-020-10002-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Rev Rep ISSN: 2629-3277 Impact factor: 6.692
Fig. 1Schematic representation showing the potential role of MSCs derived Exosomes in combating COVID-19 Infection. Panel (a) Synergistic effect of the drug and exosomes may be utilized as an effective approach against the virus. Various hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs with anti-viral properties can be packaged into exosomes for its delivery to the target site. Panel (b) The therapeutic cargo present in Exosomes aids in the reduction of inflammation, cellular repair, alveolar fluid clearance, and other damage caused to the lung during viral infection
Pre-clinical studies on exosomes isolated from different cell sources for drug loading and treatment of various diseases
| Source of Exosome | Drug | Drug Loading Techniques | Disease Type | Administration Route | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cow Milk | Celastrol | Dissolved in ethanol | Lung cancer | Subcutaneous | [ |
| Macrophage | Paclitaxel | Sonication | Pulmonary metastases | Intravenous | [ |
| Panc-1 and lung cancer cell line A549 | Gemcitabine | Incubation and sonication | Pancreatic cancer | Subcutaneous | [ |
| Umbilical Cord MSC | Taxol | Incubation | Breast Cancer | Intravenous | [ |
| Human bone marrow MSC | Phosphate &Tensin | Incubation | Spinal cord injury | Intranasal | [ |
| Rat MSC | Collagen sponge | Incubation | Rat periodontal defect | Implanted | [ |
| Mice bone marrow MSC | DOPE-RVG | Incubation | Alzheimer’s disease | Intravenous | [ |
Registered National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Trials Involving Exosomes as therapeutic interventions
| NCT Numbers | MSCs Source | Disease condition | Country | Status | Started in |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT04313647 | Adipose MSC | Healthy Volunteers | China | Recruiting | 2020 |
| NCT04276987 | Adipose MSC | Severe Novel Coronavirus Pneumonia | China | Not Yet Recruiting | 2020 |
| NCT04213248 | Umbilical MSC | Dry eye in Patients with cGVHD | China | Recruiting | 2019 |
| NCT04202783 | Neonatal MSC | Craniofacial Neuralgia | USA | Recruiting | 2019 |
| NCT03437759 | Umbilical cord | Macular Degeneration | China | Recruiting | 2018 |
| NCT03384433 | Allogenic MSC | Acute Ischemic Stroke | Iran | Completed | 2017 |
| – | Umbilical Cord | Chronic Kidney Disease | Egypt | Completed | 2016 |
| NCT02138331 | Umbilical cord | Type I Diabetes | Egypt | Unknown | 2014 |
Fig. 2Characterization of exosomes (a-b) The size and morphology of freeze-dried exosomes were similar to non-freeze-dried exosomes. Nanoparticle Tracking Analysis (NTA) showed bell-shaped particle size distribution, peaking at mode 117 nm ±5 nm and 129 nm ±8 nm for freeze-dried exosomes and non-freeze-dried exosomes respectively. There was no aggregation of exosomes observed as indicated by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) (Scale bar-100 nm, Magnification-15000X); (c) Western Blot image showing that freeze-drying method did not alter the exosomal membrane integrity and its protein content as evident by the expression of exosomal specific surface protein CD 63 and cytoplasmic protein Alix; (d) Representative image showing the powdered form of exosomes after freeze-drying
Fig. 3Evaluation of the angiogenic potential of exosomes by in-vitro Matrigel tube formation assay. Exosomes (non- freeze-dried and freeze-dried) stored at various temperatures (RT, 4 °C, −20 °C & −80 °C for 7 days) were evaluated for its tube formation potential at a concentration of 50 μg/ml. (a)Representative Phase-contrast images of the tube formation in each group (Scale bar- 100 μm; Magnification-4X). (b) Quantitative analysis of tube formation for the total number of junctions and total branching length using Image J software *, p < 0.01; **, p < 0.005. Blue dots represent the junctions and red lines represent the branches