| Literature DB >> 33796535 |
Samantha E Spellicy1, David C Hess2.
Abstract
Inflammation has proven to be a key contributing factor to the pathogenesis of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. This sequential and progressive response, marked by proliferation of resident immune cells and recruitment of peripheral immune populations, results in increased oxidative stress, and neuronal cell death. Therapeutics aimed at quelling various stages of this post-stroke inflammatory response have shown promise recently, one of which being differentiated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). While direct repopulation of damaged tissues and enhanced neurogenesis are hypothesized to encompass some of the therapeutic potential of iPSCs, recent evidence has demonstrated a substantial paracrine effect on neuroinflammation. Specifically, investigation of iPSCs, iPSC-neural progenitor cells (iPSC-NPCs), and iPSC-neuroepithelial like stem cells (iPSC-lt-NESC) has demonstrated significant immunomodulation of proinflammatory signaling and endogenous inflammatory cell populations, such as microglia. This review aims to examine the mechanisms by which iPSCs mediate neuroinflammation in the post-stroke environment, as well as delineate avenues for further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: iNSCs; induced pluripotent stem cells; neuroinflammation; stem cells; stroke
Year: 2021 PMID: 33796535 PMCID: PMC8007866 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.647415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Induced pluripotent stem cells decrease proinflammatory responses in the post-stroke environment. iPSCs and iPSC-derived cells have been shown to decrease proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-6, decrease activation and polarization of local immune cells such as astrocytes (GFAP+) and microglia (Iba1+, CD11b+, and ED1+), and increase anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10, IL-4) in animal models of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke.
Studies assessing the efficacy and anti-inflammatory potential of iPSCs in models of ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke.
| Cell-type | Model | Inflammatory finding | Mechanism of administration | Functional findings |
| Mouse primary iPSCs (WP5 line) ( | Permanent MCAO in P7 Wistar rat pups | ↑ Expression of SDF-1 in iPSC stroked animals compared to sham animals | Direct injection of ∼1 × 105 (4 sites) into peri-infarct region 7 days post-stroke | No significant difference in left paw reaches when compared to sham animals |
| Rat iPSCs ( | Collagenase induced intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) stroke in Sprague-Dawley rat model | ↓Protein and RNA levels of IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α ↑ Expression of IL-10 2 days post-ICH. ↓ MPO+ and CD11b+ cells as well as a decreased expression of activated caspase-3+/NeuN+ cells 3 days post ICH. ↓Damage to Nissl bodies ↓GFAP+ expression in ISC groups at day 42 post-ICH | Direct injection of 1 × 106 cell (3.5 mm deep relative to the bregma, 2.5 mm upon the hemorrhagic lesion) into the parenchyma, 6 h post-ICH | ↑ Modified limb placing test score compared in iPSC compared to vehicle treated |
| C57/B6 mouse MEF derived (13.5 day old embryos) iPSCs ( | Proximal tMCAO (1 h) in Long-Evans rats | ↓ Il-1b, TNF-α, Il-2, and Il-6 in iPSC + fibrin glue ↓ Expression of iNOS, ↑ IL-4 and IL-10 in iPSC + fibrin glue | Direct subdural injection 1 h post-MCAO, immediately after ischemic reversal | ↓ Infarct volume in iPSC + fibrin glue ↑ Latency to fall on rotarod and increased grasping power of left forepaw in iPSC + fibrin glue compared to control at 1, 2, 3, and 4 weeks post MCAO |
| Human iPSC-NSCs (551-8 hPSC line) ( | Transient MCAO (90 min) Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats | ↓IBA1+, round ED1+, and GFAP+ cells in the ischemic core 8 weeks post-transplant | Direct injection of 1 × 105 cells/mL into the contralateral side of the infarct regions (P + 1.0 mm, ML + 3.0 mm, and DV −5 mm from the Bregma) 7 days post-MCAO | – |
| Human (20 year-old male) iPSC-NSCs ( | Permanent right MCAO and transient bilateral common carotid occlusion (1 h) in Long-Evans rats | −↓ED1+ cells No GFAP-immunoreactive astrogliosis ↓ TUNEL+ neurons and GFAP+ astrocytes in OGD injury ↓ CXCL14 | 1 × 106 cells in epidural fibrin glue over the infarct cortex | ↑ Grip strength, ↓ Ipsilateral forearm use bias, and infarct volume |
| Human (CD34+ cord donor blood) iPSC-NSCs ( | Endothelin-1 injection in sensorimotor cortex at P12 in Wistar rats | ↓Reactive microglia found at the boundary of the graft if iPSC-NSC cells compared to EMC-alone grafts 4 weeks post grafting | Directly transplanted intracerebrally (in ECM) into the ischemic Sensorimotor cortex at day 14 post-stroke | – |
| Murine iPSC-NSCs ( | Transient MCAO (35 min) in C57BL/6N mice | ↓ GFAP+ expression in the cortex and striatum of iNSC treated animals at 7 days post-stroke, but not at 28 days post-stroke No significant difference in IBA1+ expression was observed at either time | Direct injection into the ipsilateral striatum and cortex (Anterior −0.5, 2.5 mm lateral, and 1.5–2.5 mm deep) 24 h after ischemia induction | ↑ survival, Bederson’s score, and corner test No significant difference in infarct volume or rotarod at day 7 post MCAO |
| Human (viral transgene -free and IMR90-1, IMR90 clone 1) iPSC-NSCs ( | Transient MCAO (60 min) in C57BL/6J mice | ↓ Active IBA+ cells, TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β, ICAM-1, VCAM-1, MCP-1, MIP-α of iNSCl, IgG, and MMP9 treated animals compared to non-treated animals. ↑ BDNF | Direct injection of ∼1 × 105 cells into the ipsilesional hemisphere (2 mm Posterior, 1.5 mm Lateral, and 2–2.5 mm Dorsal to the bregma) 24 h post-MCAO/R | ↓ Time for adhesive removal and beam walk ↑ Rotarod time |
| Human (HIPTM hNSC BC1) iPSC-NSCs ( | Permanent MCAO in landrace pigs | ↓IBA1+ cells in iPSC-NSC treated vs. non-treated animals No change in GFAP+ cells from non-treated animals | Direct injection into the infarcted parenchyma 5 days post-MCAO | – |
| Human iPSC-lt-NESCs (Adult male dermal fibroblasts) ( | Permanent distal MCAO and 30 min bilateral carotid occlusion in Sprague-Dawley rats | No differences in the number of IBA+ microglia/macrophages ↓Number of activated ameboid IBA+ cells in treated animals. Weak VEGF staining | Direct injection of ∼3 × 105 cells in 2 injection sites in the injured cerebral cortex (1.5 mm anterior, 1.5 mm lateral, and 2–2.5 mm deep to the bregma) 28 h post-dMCAO | ↑ Performance on left paw touches on cylinder test in treated group. No significant improvements over control in left backhand, right backhand, left forehand, and right forehand adjustments on stepping test pattern following stroke compared to non-stroked |