| Literature DB >> 33505597 |
Ramya Lakshmi Rajendran1, Manasi Pandurang Jogalekar2, Prakash Gangadaran3, Byeong-Cheol Ahn4.
Abstract
Mounting evidence has emphasized the potential of cell therapies in treating various diseases by restoring damaged tissues or replacing defective cells in the body. Cell therapies have become a strong therapeutic modality by applying noninvasive in vivo molecular imaging for examining complex cellular processes, understanding pathophysiological mechanisms of diseases, and evaluating the kinetics/dynamics of cell therapies. In particular, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have shown promise in recent years as drug carriers for cancer treatment. They can also be labeled with different probes and tracked in vivo to assess the in vivo effect of administered cells, and to optimize therapy. The exact role of MSCs in oncologic diseases is not clear as MSCs have been shown to be involved in tumor progression and inhibition, and the exact interactions between MSCs and specific cancer microenvironments are not clear. In this review, a multitude of labeling approaches, imaging modalities, and the merits/demerits of each strategy are outlined. In addition, specific examples of the use of MSCs and in vivo imaging in cancer therapy are provided. Finally, present limitations and future outlooks in terms of the translation of different imaging approaches in clinics are discussed. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapy; Drug delivery; In vivo molecular imaging; Mesenchymal stem cells; Superparamagnetic iron oxide
Year: 2020 PMID: 33505597 PMCID: PMC7789123 DOI: 10.4252/wjsc.v12.i12.1492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Stem Cells ISSN: 1948-0210 Impact factor: 5.326
Figure 1Schematic illustration of labeling mesenchymal stem cells for SPIO: Small superparamagnetic iron oxide; NIS: Sodium iodide symporter; HSV-TK: Herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase; EGFP: Enhanced green fluorescent protein; [18F]FHBG: 9-(4-[F]fluoro-3-hydroxymethylbutyl) guanine.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of the labeling strategy for A: After fluorescent protein (enhanced green fluorescent protein) transduction into mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) or binding of lipophilic labeling agents (e.g., fluorescent nanoparticles and VivoTrack 680) to the membrane of MSCs, cells are injected into the tumor-bearing mice, and their migration is visualized with the use of in vivo fluorescent imaging; B: After the bioluminescent protein (Firefly or Renilla luciferase) transduction into MSCs, cells are injected into the tumor-bearing mice. The light emitted due to the interaction between luciferase and its substrates (D-luciferin or coelenterazine) is captured by in vivo bioluminescent imaging. MSCs: Mesenchymal stem cells; EGFP: Enhanced green fluorescent protein; Fluc: Firefly luciferase; Rluc: Renilla luciferase.
Figure 3Schematic illustration of the labeling strategy for A: Gene transduction of sodium iodide symporter (NIS) or herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) into mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can aid radiotracers (123I, 124I and 99mTc) in entering MSCs. MSCs-NIS are injected into tumor-bearing mice followed by the injection of radiotracers. In vivo nuclear imaging (positron-emission tomography, camera imaging, and single-photon emission computed tomography) can visualize migration of the MSCs; B: MSCs can be incubated with molecules including small superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) or SPIO coated with gold-nanoparticles (SPIO@Au-NPs). SPIO-labeled MSCs are injected into tumor-bearing mice, and in vivo magnetic resonance imaging can visualize migration of the MSCs. MSCs: Mesenchymal stem cells; NIS: Sodium iodide symporter; HSV-TK: Herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase; 99mTc: Technetium-99m; [18F]FHBG: 9-(4-[F]fluoro-3-hydroxymethylbutyl) guanine; SPIO: Superparamagnetic iron oxide.
Noninvasive in vivo imaging of mesenchymal stem cells in treatment and drug delivery for cancer
| Imaging | Imaging modality | Labelingmethod/agent | Cell type | Naïve/modified | Cell origin | Subject | Route of injection | Duration | Tumor | Outcome | Clinical translation | Ref. |
| Optical | Fluorescent | FNPs | BM-MSCs | AlPcS4@FNPs@MSCs | Human | Mice | Intratumor | Immediately | Human osteosarcoma | Inhibition of tumor | Limited | Lenna |
| EGFP | BM-MSCs | TRAIL-MSCs | Mouse | Mice | Intravenous | 1-10 d | Mouse colon cancer | Inhibition of tumor | Limited | Zhang | ||
| VivoTrack 680 | BM-MSCs | MSCs | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 2-24 h | Breast cancer | Inhibition of tumor metastasis | Limited | Camorani | ||
| Bioluminescent | Rluc | UC-MSCs | HSV-ttk-MSCs | Human | Mice | Intratumor | 1-4 d | Breast cancer | Inhibition of tumor | Limited | Leng | |
| Fluc | BM-MSCs | MSC-Tet-TK/ MSC-TK | Mouse | Mice | Intratumor | 1 and 5 d | Mouse colon cancer | Inhibition of tumor | Limited | Kalimuthu | ||
| Fluc | BM-MSCs | MSC-CXCR4 | Mouse | Mice | Intravenous | 1 and 24 h | Breast cancer | Homing of genetically modified MSCs to tumor | Limited | Kalimuthu | ||
| Fluc | BM-MSCs | Naïve | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 5 to 8 wk | Breast cancer | Homing of MSCs to lung metastatic tumor | Limited | Meleshina | ||
| Fluc | BM-MSCs | Naïve | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 1 and 24 h | Thyroid and breast cancer | In vitro Dox delivery/homing of MSCs to tumor | Limited | Kalimuthu | ||
| Fluc | BM-MSCs | Naïve | Mouse | Mice | Intravenous | 1-11 d | Murine breast cancer | Homing and differentiation of MSCs to tumor | Limited | Wang | ||
| Fluc | BM-MSCs | MSCs-oncolytic adenovirus | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 15 min to 10 d | Murine large cell lung carcinoma | Homing of MSCs to tumor | Limited | Hakkarainen | ||
| Rluc | BM-MSCs | MSC-e23sFv-Fdt-tBid | Mouse | Mice | Intravenous | 24 h | Breast cancer and gastric cancer | Inhibition of tumor | Limited | Cai | ||
| Nuclear | PET | [18F]-FHBG | BM-MSCs | MSC-HSV1-TK | Human | Mice | Subcutaneous | 4 wk | Murine colon carcinoma | MSCs stably stay in tumor | Yes | Hung |
| 124I | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 72 h | Human hepatocellular carcinoma | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Knoop | ||
| 124I | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Mouse | Mice | Intravenous | 72 h | Mouse pancreatic tumor | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Schug | ||
| γ-camera | 123I | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 72 h | Human hepatocellular carcinoma | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Knoop | |
| 123I | BM-MSCs | HSP70B-NIS-MSC | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 0-72 h | Human hepatocellular carcinoma | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Tutter | ||
| 123I | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Mouse | Mice | Intravenous | 72 h | Mouse pancreatic tumor | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Schug | ||
| 123I | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 72 h | Human hepatocellular carcinoma | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Schug | ||
| 99mTc | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 3-14 d | Breast cancer | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Dwyer | ||
| 99mTc | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 3-24 d | Human cervical cancer | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Belmar-Lopez | ||
| MR | MRI | SPIO | BM-MSCs | MSC-hNIS | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 3-24 d | Human cervical cancer | Inhibition of tumor | Yes | Belmar-Lopez |
| SPIO@Au-NPs | BM-MSCs | MSC | Human | Mice | Intravenous | 0-72 h | Human glioma | Homing of MSC to tumor | Yes | Qiao |
FLI: Fluorescence imaging; BLI: Bioluminescence imaging; MRI: Magnetic resonance imaging; PET: Positron-emission tomography; γ-camera: Gamma camera imaging; FNPs: Fluorescent nanoparticles; EGFP: Enhanced green fluorescent protein; Fluc: Firefly luciferase; Rluc: Renilla luciferase; SPIO: Superparamagnetic iron oxide; TRAIL: Tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand; HSV1-tk: Herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase; hNIS: Human sodium iodide symporter; Au-NPs: Gold nanoparticles; HSP70B: Heat-inducible promoter; PDGFRβ: Platelet-derived growth factor receptor β; CXCR4: CXC chemokine receptor type 4.