| Literature DB >> 33859701 |
Zhiping Wei1, Jintao Yuan2, Gaoying Wang1, Dickson Kofi Wiredu Ocansey1,3, Zhiwei Xu1, Fei Mao1.
Abstract
Research on mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) starts from the earliest assumption that cells derived from the bone marrow have the ability to repair tissues. Several scientists have since documented the crucial role of bone marrow-derived MSCs (BM-MSCs) in processes such as embryonic bone and cartilage formation, adult fracture and tissue repair, and immunomodulatory activities in therapeutic applications. In addition to BM-MSCs, several sources of MSCs have been reported to possess tissue repair and immunoregulatory abilities, making them potential treatment options for many diseases. Therefore, the therapeutic potential of MSCs in various diseases including autoimmune conditions has been explored. In addition to an imbalance of T cell subsets in most patients with autoimmune diseases, they also exhibit complex disease manifestations, overlapping symptoms among diseases, and difficult treatment. MSCs can regulate T cell subsets to restore their immune homeostasis toward disease resolution in autoimmune conditions. This review summarizes the role of MSCs in relieving autoimmune diseases via the regulation of T cell phenotypes.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33859701 PMCID: PMC8024100 DOI: 10.1155/2021/5583994
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
The surface markers and differentiation potential of different kinds of MSCs.
| Sources | Surface marker | Differentiation potential | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| BM-MSCs | CD271(+), CD59(+), CD81(+), CD47(+), CD151(+), CD147(+), CD98(+), CD143(-), Lin (-) CD45(-), CD140a (PDGFR | Strong adipogenic and osteogenic potential, poor chondrogenic potential, strong differentiation potential of corneal epithelial cells, and cardiac progenitors | [ |
| UC-MSCs | CD73(+), CD90(+), CD105(+), CD44(+), CDH-1(+), CD29(+), CD34(-), CD45(-) | Muscle, neurogenic cells, hepatocyte-like cells, endothelial lineage | [ |
| AD-MSCs | CD45(-), HLA-DR(-), CD44(+), CD106(+), CD34(+), CD90(+), CD105(+) | Strong adipogenic and osteogenic potential, poor chondrogenic potential, poor differentiation potential of corneal and muscle | [ |
| DP-MSCs | TRO-1(+), CD146(+), CD29(+), CD90(+), CD105(+), CD44(+), CD59(+), CD73(+), CD146(-), CD34(-), CD45(-), CD11b(-), CD45(-) | Osteogenic, adipogenic, chondrogenic, fibroblast lineage, neural stem cells | [ |
| SD-MSCs | CD9(+), CD10(+), CD13(+), CD44(+), CD54(+), CD55(+), CD90(+), CD105(+), CD166(+), D7-FIB(+), CD14(-), CD20(-), CD45(-), CD133(-) | Strong chondrocyte, osteocyte, and adipocyte differentiation ability, as well as muscle differentiation | [ |
The application of MSCs in other autoimmune diseases.
| Disease | Source of MSCs | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| T1D | UC-MSCs | MSCs were safe and tolerable | [ |
| MS | BM-MSCs | Clinically feasible and relatively safe and could immediately produce immune regulation | [ |
| SS | UC-MSCs | Effective in treatment | [ |
| PBC | BM-MSCs | MSCs were well tolerated and no obvious side effects were found | [ |
| HT | AD-MSCs | MSCs inhibited inflammation and helped recover from injury | [ |
Figure 1MSCs alleviate IBD by regulating T cells. MSCs induce CD4 T cells to differentiate into Treg and maintain Th17/Th1 balance through a series of cytokines and cell-to-cell contact. This results in decreased inflammatory activities to repair intestinal inflammation.
Figure 2MSCs relieve RA by regulating T cells. MSCs can regulate the balance of T cells by homing to the articular cavity and secreting a series of cytokines that increase the anti-inflammatory activity of the environment. T cells are also regulated via the transfer of mitochondria from MSCs to T cells. Additionally, MSCs under endoplasmic reticulum stress can also play a regulatory role in inducing T cells.