| Literature DB >> 33059766 |
Abstract
Human amniotic epithelial cells (hAECs) derived from placental tissues have gained considerable attention in the field of regenerative medicine. hAECs possess embryonic stem cell-like proliferation and differentiation capabilities, and adult stem cell-like immunomodulatory properties. Compared with other types of stem cell, hAECs have special advantages, including easy isolation, plentiful numbers, the obviation of ethical debates, and non-immunogenic and non-tumorigenic properties. During the past two decades, the therapeutic potential of hAECs for treatment of various diseases has been extensively investigated. Accumulating evidence has demonstrated that hAEC transplantation helps to repair and rebuild the function of damaged tissues and organs by different molecular mechanisms. This systematic review focused on summarizing the biological characteristics of hAECs, therapeutic applications, and recent advances in treating various tissue injuries and disorders. Relevant studies published in English from 2000 to 2020 describing the role of hAECs in diseases and phenotypes were comprehensively sought out using PubMed, MEDLINE, and Google Scholar. According to the research content, we described the major hAEC characteristics, including induced differentiation plasticity, homing and differentiation, paracrine function, and immunomodulatory properties. We also summarized the current status of clinical research and discussed the prospects of hAEC-based transplantation therapies. In this review, we provide a comprehensive understanding of the therapeutic potential of hAECs, including their use for cell replacement therapy as well as secreted cytokine and exosome biotherapy. Moreover, we showed that the powerful immune-regulatory function of hAECs reveals even more possibilities for their application in the treatment of immune-related diseases. In the future, establishing the optimal culture procedure, achieving precise and accurate treatment, and enhancing the therapeutic potential by utilizing appropriate preconditioning and/or biomaterials would be new challenges for further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: Cell transplantation; Differentiation; Human amniotic/amnion epithelial cells; Immunomodulation; Paracrine properties; Regenerative medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33059766 PMCID: PMC7559178 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-020-01951-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
The induced differentiation of hAECs in vitro
| Organ/focuses | Cell types | Phenotypes | Inducing conditions | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hepatocyte-like cells | Expressing hepatocyte-like cell functional genes: albumin, CYP1A1, CYP1A2, c-met, and transcription factors: HNF3, HNF4, C/EBPa, and HNF1 | Using a combined approach of dexamethasone, HGF, IGF, and other cytokines | [ | |
| Hepatocyte-like cells | Expressing hepatic related genes: albumin, A1AT, CYP3A4, 3A7, 1A2, 2B6, and the asialoglycoprotein receptor 1 (ASGPR1) | Using extracellular matrix substrates; cocultured with mouse hepatocytes | [ | |
| Hepatic differentiation | Displayed a similar hepatic morphology; expressing specific hepatic genes: albumin, CYP7A1, and CYP3A4 | Using a specific hepatic differentiation protocol | [ | |
| Hepatic differentiation | The formation of bile canaliculi; secreting albumin; uptaking low-density lipoprotein and showing inducible CYP3A4 and CYP2C9 enzymatic activities | Using four-step hepatic differentiation protocol | [ | |
| Hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells | Forming capillary-like structure in vitro and differentiate into HSECs in vivo | Under proangiogenic conditions | [ | |
| Insulin-producing cells | The formation of three-dimensional (3D) spheroids; producing pancreatic endocrine hormones; releasing C-peptide under hyperglycemic condition | Culturing on extracellular matrix | [ | |
| Pancreatic lineage cells | Expressing pancreatic endoderm and progenitor genes: NKX6.1, NeuroD1, and pancreatic lineage genes: PDX1, SOX17, RFX6 | Combination of transcription factor PDX1 with activin A or nicotinamide | [ | |
| Islet-like cells | Expressing the endocrine-related genes: PDX1, ngn3, insulin, and glucagon; secreting insulin in response to high glucose exposure | Using DMEM with different supplements and suspension culture | [ | |
| Islet-like cell clusters | Expressing pancreatic development-related genes: PDX1, NKX6-1, NEUROG3, PAX6, INS, and GCG; insulin positive and sensitive to glucose | Adding nicotinamide plus betacellulin | [ | |
| Pancreatic cells | Expressing pancreatic differentiation related genes: NKX6.1, SOX17, RFX6, NEUROD1, and PAX4 | Inducing endogenous PDX1 expression, EGF, and poly- | [ | |
| Acinar cells | Expressing α-amylase and mucins | Cocultured with submandibular gland acinar cells using a double-chamber system | [ | |
| Insulin secreting cells | Expressing PDX1 and beta2 microglobulin; secreting insulin | Treated with nicotinamide and N2 supplement | [ | |
| Germ cell-like cells | Expressing germ cell-specific genes: GDF9, DAZL, and SCP3; producing estradiol | Medium supplemented with 5% human follicular fluid | [ | |
| Follicle-like structure | Expressing germ cell-specific genes DAZL and GDF9; secreting estradiol | Medium supplemented with 5% human follicular fluid | [ | |
| Germ cell-like cells (diploid cells) | Expressing germ cell-specific protein DAZL, oocyte-specific proteins GDF9 and ZP3, meiosis-specific proteins DMC1 and SCP3 | Cultured in medium containing serum substitute supplement (SSS) | [ | |
| Corneal epithelial-like cells | Showing a similar morphology to hCECs; expressing CK3/12, CK14, CK19, and P63 | Cultured with human corneal epithelial cells (hCECs) in a Transwell coculture system | [ | |
| Corneal epithelial-like cells | Expressing CK3/12 | Seeded onto rabbit corneal stroma | [ | |
| Corneal epithelial-like cells | Expressing CK3/12 | Adding the conditioned medium of spontaneously immortalized human corneal epithelial cells (S-ihCECs) | [ | |
| Conjunctival epithelium-like cells | Showed conjunctival epithelium phenotype; producing mu5ac | Cultured with induced-denuded conjunctival matrix and conjunctival homogenate | [ | |
| Neuronal differentiation | Expressing neural cell markers NSE and NeuN | Adding noggin, bFGF, and retinoic acid | [ | |
| Neuronal differentiation | Upregulation of transcription factors involving in neuronal differentiation | Treated with rosmarinic acid | [ | |
| Cortical progenitors | Expressing cortical neuron-specific proteins: TBR2, OTX2, NeuN, and β-III-tubulin | Adding growth factors and small molecules | [ | |
| Schwann-like cells | Exhibiting a typical bipolar or tripolar morphology; expressing S-100; increasing the expressions of BDNF and GDNF | Cocultured with Schwann cells (SCs) | [ | |
| Osteogenic differentiation | Increasing cellular ALP activity and extracellular mineralization; expressing Runx2, osterix, ALP, collagen I, and OPN | Cultured with classic osteogenic medium | [ | |
| Cartilage differentiation | Expressing cartilage markers: aggrecan, Sox9, CEP-68, and type II and X collagens; promoting matrix synthesis | Treated with BMP-7 or TGF-β1 | [ | |
| Osteoblasts | Upregulating Runx2, ALP, and OPN | Mechanical stretch | [ | |
| Polarized airway-like cells | Forming 3D structures; expressing CFTR and possessing functional iodide/chloride (I−/Cl−) ion channels | Cultured with small airway growth medium (SAGM) | [ | |
| Cardiomyocyte-like cells | Expressing cardiac-specific genes Nkx2.5 and alpha-actinin | Treated with activin A and BMP-4 | [ | |
| Epidermal cells | The presence of desmosomes; expressing CK18 and CK14 | Cultured in air-liquid interface | [ |
Homing and differentiation of hAECs in vivo
| Diseases/focuses | Transplantation method/dose | Species | Outcome | Repair mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parkinson’s disease | Injection of striatum (4 × 104 cells) | Rats | Ameliorating of apomorphine-induced rotational asymmetry | Differentiating into TH-immunoreactive cells | [ |
| Ischemic brain injury | Injection of dorsolateral striatum (8 × 105 cells) | Rats | Ameliorating behavioral dysfunction; reducing infarct volume | Expressing neuronal progenitor marker (Nestin), neuronal marker (MAP 2), astrocyte marker (GFAP) | [ |
| Alzheimer’s disease | Intracerebroventricular injection (1.2 × 105 cells) | Mice | Improving the spatial memory; increasing acetylcholine concentration and the number of hippocampal cholinergic neurites | Expressing stem cell-specific markers OCT-4 and Nanog | [ |
| Chronic liver failure | Intrasplenical injection (2 × 106 cells) | Mice | Liver was larger in size, softer, and less nodular; increasing serum albumin level | Differentiating into functional hepatocytes positive for albumin | [ |
| Lung injury | Fetal jugular vein (3 × 106 cells) | Sheep | Reducing ventilation-induced preterm lung injury, including less collagen, elastin, fibrosis, normalized secondary-septal crests | Differentiating into type I and II alveolar cells | [ |
| Premature ovarian failure | Intravenously injection (2 × 106 cells) | Mice | Promoting folliculogenesis; repairing ovarian function | Differentiating into granulosa cells expressing follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (FSHR) | [ |
| Myocardial infarction | Injection of the infarcted myocardium (1 × 106 cells) | Rats | Decreasing infarct size; improving cardiac function | Differentiating into cardiomyocyte-like cells expressing myocardium-specific marker myosin heavy chain | [ |
| Gland injury | Intra-glandular injection (1 × 106 cells) | Mice | Restoring the morphology and function of salivary gland | Differentiating into acinar-like cells | [ |
| Inner ear injury | Injection of cochlea (1 × 105 cells) | Hartley guinea pigs | Cooperation in the regional potassium ion recycling | Expressing cochlear fibrocyte markers connexin 26 and Na-K-adenosine triphosphatase | [ |
| Achilles tendon injury | In situ injection (10 × 106 cells) | Sheep | Improving tendon microarchitecture and blood vessel remodeling; contributing to tendon regeneration | Differentiating into tenocytes expressing collagen I | [ |
Paracrine function of hAECs in different diseases
| Diseases/focuses | Injection method | Species | Outcome | Repair mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parkinson’s disease | Injection of tegmentum of the midbrain | Rats | Enhancing the survival of DA; protecting the morphological integrity of TH-positive neurons against toxic insult | hAEC-CM (neurotrophins such as BDNF and NT-3) | [ |
| Corneal alkali injury | Injection the dorsal bulbar subconjunctival | Rabbits | Reducing the infiltration of inflammatory cells; promoting corneal wound healing | hAEC-CM (anti-inflammatory factors) | [ |
| Corneal injury | Topically application | Mice | Reducing corneal neovascularization; suppressing corneal inflammatory reactions | hAEC-CM (anti-inflammatory factors) | [ |
| Premature ovarian failure | Intraperitoneally injection | Mice | Promoting the formation of vascular; restoring ovarian function | hAEC-CM (proangiogenic factors) | [ |
| Premature ovarian failure | Ovarian injection | Mice | Promoting follicular development; inhibiting granulosa cell apoptosis; restoring ovarian function | hAEC-CM (TGF-β1; anti-apoptotic effect) | [ |
| Chronic liver fibrosis | Intravenously injection | Mice | Reducing collagen synthesis and macrophage infiltration; inducing macrophage toward M2 phenotype | hAEC-CM (anti-fibrosis, anti-inflammation) | [ |
| Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis | Intraperitoneally injection | Mice | Reducing hepatic inflammation; inhibiting liver fibrosis | hAEC-CM (anti-inflammation; anti-fibrosis) | [ |
| Myocardial infraction | Cardiac injection | Rats | Regenerating myocardial tissue; improving cardiac function | hAEC-secreting proangiogenic factors | [ |
| Wound healing | Topically injection | Rats | Promoting the migration and proliferation of fibroblasts; accelerating wound healing; inhibiting scar formation | hAEC-exosomes | [ |
| Wound healing | Topically injection | Mice | Stimulating the migration and proliferation of fibroblasts; accelerating wound healing | hAEC-exosomes (miRNAs) | [ |
| Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis | Intravenously injection; intranasal instillation | Mice | Reducing lung inflammation and fibrosis; improving tissue-to-airspace ratio | hAEC-exosomes (anti-inflammation; anti-fibrosis) | [ |
| Chronic liver fibrosis | Intravenously injection | Mice | Reducing collagen synthesis and macrophage infiltration; inducing macrophage toward to M2 phenotype | hAEC-EV (anti-fibrotic proteins) | [ |
| Premature ovarian failure | Ovarian injection | Mice | Inhibiting the apoptosis of granulosa cells; repairing ovarian function | hAEC-exosomes (miR-1246; anti-apoptosis) | [ |
Immunomodulatory function of hAECs in different diseases
| Diseases/focuses | Transplantation method/dose | Species | Outcome | Repair mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ischemic stroke | Tail vein injection (1 × 106 hAECs); saphenous vein injection (5 × 106 hAECs) | Mice, marmosets | Reducing brain infarcted volume and functional deficits; promoting long-term functional recovery | Inhibiting apoptosis and inflammation; modulating immunosuppression | [ |
| Intracerebral hemorrhage | Injection of cortex (1 × 106 hAECs) | Rats | Reducing brain edema; ameliorating the neurologic deficits | Suppressing the activation of microglia; reducing the inflammatory response | [ |
| Perinatal brain injury | Intravenously (1 × 105 hAECs) | Mice | Reducing microglia apoptosis; increasing microglial phagocytic activity | Modulating microglia via releasing trophic factors | [ |
| Fetal brain injury | Injection of brachial artery catheter (6 × 106 hAECs) | Ewes | Reducing white matter injury; mitigating associated brain injury | Inhibiting inflammation and apoptosis; reducing the number of activated microglial cells | [ |
| Multiple sclerosis | Intravenously (2 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Reducing monocyte/macrophage infiltration and demyelination | Mediating immunosuppression via secreting TGF-β and PGE2; promoting Th2 cytokine shift | [ |
| Lung injury | Intraperitoneally (4 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Decreasing neutrophil infiltration, fibrosis, collagen content; repairing lung function | Depending on the function of host macrophage | [ |
| Lung injury | Intraperitoneally (4 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Reducing macrophage infiltration; increasing the number of M2 macrophage | Modulating macrophage polarization, migration, and phagocytosis via paracrine pathway | [ |
| Lung injury | Intraperitoneally (4 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Mitigating lung inflammation and fibrosis | Tregs are required for hAEC-mediated macrophage polarization | [ |
| Lung injury | Intraperitoneally (4 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Reducing pro-inflammatory immune cells; preventing lung injury | Mediating immunomodulation partly though LXA4 | [ |
| Preterm neonatal lung injury | Intratracheally (90 × 106 hAECs) | Lambs | Modulating the pulmonary inflammatory response to ventilation; reducing acute lung injury | Immunomodulatory effects | [ |
| Fetal lung injury | Fetal jugular vein injection (90 × 106 hAECs); fetal intratracheal infusion (18 × 106 hAECs) | Sheep | Attenuating the fetal pulmonary inflammatory response | Reducing inflammatory cytokines | [ |
| Neonatal lung injury | Intraperitoneally (4.5 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Partially reducing hyperoxia-induced inflammation and structural lung damage | Attenuating inflammation | [ |
| Neonatal lung injury | Intravenously; intratracheal infusion (5 × 104; 7.5 × 104; 1 × 105 hAECs) | Mice | Improving the tissue-to-airspace ratio and the long-term of cardiorespiratory function | Reducing macrophages, dendritic cells, and natural killer cells | [ |
| Achilles tendon injury | In situ filling (10 × 106 hAECs) | Sheep | Inhibiting inflammatory cell infiltration; activating the M2 macrophage subpopulation | Regulating inflammatory and immunomodulatory response; accelerating blood vessel and ECM remodeling | [ |
| Autoimmune ovarian disease | Intravenously (2 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Restoring ovarian function; upregulating Treg cells; reducing the inflammatory reaction | Modulating macrophage function by paracrine factors (TGF-β and MIF) | [ |
| Experimental autoimmune thyroiditis; systemic lupus erythematosus | Intravenously (1.5 × 106 hAECs); intravenously (1.5 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Preventing lymphocyte infiltration into the thyroid; improving the damage of thyroid follicular; reducing immunoglobulin profiles | Modulating the immune cell balance by downregulating the ratios of Th17/Treg cells; upregulating the proportion of B10 cells | [ |
| Diabetic wound healing | Intradermally (1 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Promoting diabetic wound healing | Reducing inflammation and promoting neovascularization by paracrine pathway | [ |
| Liver injury | Intravenously (2 × 106 hAECs) | Mice | Reducing hepatic fibrosis | Inducing M2 macrophage phenotype | [ |
Clinical trials of hAECs transplantation registered at http://ClinicalTrials.gov
| Study | Disease | Design | Start date | Status | Phase | Estimated enrollment | Intervention | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Human Amniotic Epithelial Cell in Treatment of Refractory Severe Intrauterine Adhesion | Intrauterine adhesion | Safety and effectiveness | March 2018 | Not yet recruiting | 1 | 20 | Uterine cavity infusion (100 million) | NCT03381807 |
| 2 | Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells for Asherman’s Syndrome | Asherman’s syndrome | Safety and effectiveness | October 2017 | Not yet recruiting | 1 | 50 | Biological amnion; biological amnion loaded with hAECs (100 million); intravenous infusion (100 million); intrauterine infusion (100 million); hydrogel loaded with hAECs (100 million) | NCT03223454 |
| 3 | A Therapeutic Trial of Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells Transplantation for Primary Ovarian Insufficiency Patients | Primary ovarian insufficiency/premature ovarian failure/infertility | Safety and effectiveness | June 2020 | Recruiting | 1 | 36 | Bilateral ovarian artery infusion (2 × 107 cells) | NCT02912104 |
| 4 | Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells Treatment for Ovarian Insufficiency | Premature ovarian failure | Safety and effectiveness | December 2017 | Not yet recruiting | Not applicable | 20 | Minimally invasive implantation (200 million); intravenous infusion (100 million for 3 times) | NCT03207412 |
| 5 | Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells for Treatment of Bronchial Fistula | Bronchial fistula | Therapeutic potential | October 2016 | Recruiting | 1 | 10 | Endoscopic injection of hAECs to fistula (3–5 × 107 cells) | NCT02959333 |
| 6 | Effect of Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells on Children With Spastic Cerebral Palsy | Spastic cerebral palsy | Therapeutic potential | April 2017 | Enrolling by invitation | 1 | 10 | Intrathecal injection | NCT03107975 |
| 7 | Treatment of Non-union of Limb Fracture with Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells (hAECs) | Non-union fracture | Safety and efficacy | December 2017 | Not yet recruiting | 1/2 | 36 | Transplant to non-union site (50 million) | NCT03031509 |
| 8 | hAECs Are Preliminarily Applied in Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation | Leukemia | Observational | July 2020 | Recruiting | Not applicable | 30 | Unknown | NCT03759899 |
| 9 | Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells Prevent Acute Graft-versus-host Disease After Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation | Acute graft-versus-host disease | Safety and efficacy | July 2020 | Recruiting | Not applicable | 27 | Infusion of hAECs (1 × 106, 2 × 106, 5 × 106 cell/kg) | NCT03764228 |