| Literature DB >> 32922398 |
Jialing Liu1, Qiuli Liu1, Xiaoyong Chen1,2,3.
Abstract
The therapeutic potential of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) has been investigated in many preclinical and clinical studies. This potential is dominantly based on the immunosuppressive properties of MSCs. Although the therapeutic profiles of MSC transplantation are still not fully characterized, accumulating evidence has revealed that B cells change after MSC infusion, in particular inducing regulatory B cells (Bregs). The immunosuppressive effects of Bregs have been demonstrated, and these cells are being evaluated as new targets for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. MSCs are capable of educating B cells and inducing regulatory B cell production via cell-to-cell contact, soluble factors, and extracellular vesicles (EVs). These cells thus have the potential to complement each other's immunomodulatory functions, and a combined approach may enable synergistic effects for the treatment of immunological diseases. However, compared with investigations regarding other immune cells, investigations into how MSCs specifically regulate Bregs have been superficial and insufficient. In this review, we discuss the current findings related to the immunomodulatory effects of MSCs on regulatory B cells and provide optimal strategies for applications in immune-related disease treatments.Entities:
Keywords: cell-to-cell contact; extracellular vesicles (EVs); mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs); regulatory B cells (Bregs); soluble factors
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32922398 PMCID: PMC7456948 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.01843
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Phenotypes of IL-10+ Bregs.
| Mouse | CD138high ( | Anti-Salmonella immunity |
| CD19+CD5+CD1dhigh ( | Treg induction; inhibition of Th17 response | |
| CD1dhighCD23highCD21int ( | Protective role in the mucosa | |
| CD19+CD43+CD80+CD86+CD40+ ( | Inhibition of Th1 response | |
| CD19+CD43+CD5+ ( | Amelioration of cGVHD | |
| CD1dhigh ( | Treg induction | |
| CD5+CD1dhi ( | Inhibition of Th1 cells activation; induction of islet allograft tolerance | |
| CD19+CD24highCD38high ( | Suppression of Th1 cell differentiation | |
| IL-21R+ MZP ( | Induction transplantation tolerance | |
| Human | CD5+IL-10+ ( | Inhibition of Th1 response |
| CD19+CD25highCD27highCD86highCD1dhighIL-10highTGF-βhigh ( | Suppression of CD4+ T cell proliferation | |
| CD19+CD38+CD1d+IgM+CD147+CD25+ ( | Suppression of antitumor immune responses | |
| CD24highCD27+ ( | Negatively regulate monocyte cytokine production; predicted the occurrence of acute allograft rejection in liver transplantation | |
| CD154+ ( | A character of SLE patients | |
| CD25+CD71+CD73lowPD-L1+ ( | Suppress antigen-specific immune responses | |
| CD27intCD38+ ( | Production of IL-10 | |
| CD5highCD38lowPD-1high ( | Inhibition of Th1 and Th17 differentiation | |
| CD23+CD43+( | Inhibition of T cell response |
Summary of the studies on MSC-mediated effects to Bregs.
| Chen et al. ( | Clinical trial: BOS after allo-HSCT | Increased CD5+B cells and IL-10-producing CD19+CD5+ Bregs |
| Chen et al. ( | Colitis model | Induced the novel CD23+CD43+Bregs subset |
| Planella et al. ( | The PF as well as the CM could increase induced CD24highCD38high B cells | |
| Lu et al. ( | Acute GVHD model | Decreased IL-4 and increased IL-10+Bregs |
| Li et al. ( | EAE model | Increased CD5+ IL-10+ B cells |
| Mehdipour et al. ( | Decreased TNF-α+/ IL-10+ B cells ratio in B cell-ASCs co-culture | |
| Luk et al. ( | Under immunological quiescent conditions, MSC increased IL-10+CD38high CD24high Bregs | |
| Yan et al. ( | CIA model | Increased CD21highCD23high T2 cells, CD23lowCD21high MZ cells, and CD5+CD1d+IL-10+Bregs |
| Gupte et al. ( | Increased IL-10-secreting Bregs from baseline of patients | |
| Cho et al. ( | Animal | Induced IL-10-expressing Bregs in an EBI3-dependent manner |
| Zhang et al. ( | Clinical trial: NS after allo-HSCT | Induced CD19+CD5+IL-10+ Bregs |
| Hermankova et al. ( | IFN-γ-treated MSCs inhibited IL-10 production by activated B cells via cell-contact and the Cox-2 pathway | |
| Chao et al. ( | Colitis model | Boosted the numbers of CD5+ B cells and IL-10-producing CD5+ Bregs |
| Peng et al. ( | Clinical trial: refractory cGvHD | Increased IL-10-producing CD5+ B cells |
| Franquesa et al. ( | Reduced plasmablast formation and induce IL-10-producing CD19+CD24highCD38high Bregs | |
| Park et al. ( | SLE model | Increased IL-10-producing Bregs |
| Garimella et al. ( | CIA model | Increased the CD19+CD1dhighCD5+ Bregs in the spleens of ASC-treated CIA mice |
| Wang et al. ( | Cardiac allograft model | MSC-expressing B7-H1 neutralization reduced IL-4highIL-10highCD83low B cells |
| Guo et al. ( | EAE model | Upregulated CD1dhighCD5+Bregs |
BOS, Bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome; HSCT, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation; GVHD, graft-versus-host disease; EAE, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; CIA, collagen-induced arthritis; NS, Nephrotic syndrome; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.
Figure 1The role of MSCs in regulating the IL-10 producing regulatory B cells. MSCs perform functions on modulating IL-10 producing regulatory B cells via many manners, including (1) Cell-to-cell contact: MSCs play roles in B cells via PD1-PDL1 pathway to inhibit antigen-dependent proliferation and differentiation, and induce Bregs. (2) Soluble factors: IL-10-producing Breg subsets, including CD5+ Bregs, CD24highCD38high Bregs, CD1d+CD5+ Bregs, and CD23+CD43+ Bregs, are mediated by MSCs-secreting soluble factors. (3) Extracellular Vesicles: MSCs-EVs could inhibit B cell proliferation and BCR-mediated Ca2+ mobilization, regulate PI3K-AKT signaling pathway in B cells that is critical for Breg cell development, and induce CD24highCD38high B cell subpopulation, a classic phenotype of Bregs, but without IL-10 production. Based on the current data, MSCs-EVs might be involved in MSCs regulating IL-10 producing B cells.