| Literature DB >> 33869217 |
Rebecca M Harman1, Charlotte Marx1, Gerlinde R Van de Walle1.
Abstract
The therapeutic potential of the mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) secretome, consisting of all molecules secreted by MSCs, is intensively studied. MSCs can be readily isolated, expanded, and manipulated in culture, and few people argue with the ethics of their collection. Despite promising pre-clinical studies, most MSC secretome-based therapies have not been implemented in human medicine, in part because the complexity of bioactive factors secreted by MSCs is not completely understood. In addition, the MSC secretome is variable, influenced by individual donor, tissue source of origin, culture conditions, and passage. An increased understanding of the factors that make up the secretome and the ability to manipulate MSCs to consistently secrete factors of biologic importance will improve MSC therapy. To aid in this goal, we can draw from the wealth of information available on secreted factors from MSC isolated from veterinary species. These translational animal models will inspire efforts to move human MSC secretome therapy from bench to bedside.Entities:
Keywords: human; mesenchymal stromal cells; secretome; stem cells; translational models; veterinary
Year: 2021 PMID: 33869217 PMCID: PMC8044970 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.654885
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Bioactive components of the mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) secretome. The MSC secretome is comprised of all factors secreted by MSCs. The bioactive components of the secretome include a wide range of small molecules, nucleic acids (importantly, regulatory RNAs), peptides, and proteins. These molecules can either be released freely or packaged in extracellular vesicles, which are lipid bilayer-delimited particles of various size and composition.
Human MSC secretome components, targets, effects, and potential therapeutic uses.
| Bone marrow | Complete secretome including VEGFC, TGF-β1, TGF-β2, GDF6 | Secretome not tested with targets in a model system | Hematological malignancies | |
| Adipose | EV derived alpha-1-antitrypsin | Pulmonary disease | ||
| Umbilical cord, dental pulp | Complete secretome | HUVEC: decreased apoptosis and senescence, increased migration, tube formation, | General MSC based therapies | |
| Umbilical cord | TSG-6 in complete CM, EXO | Newborn mouse model of BPD: improvement of lung, cardiac, and brain pathology | Bronchopulmonary dysplasia | |
| Adipose | Complete secretome | Arsenic injured human neurons: prevent arsenic induced damage | Prevention of arsenic induced toxicity | |
| Hoffa’s fat pad, synovial membrane, umbilical cord, cartilage | Complete secretome including MMPs, IL-17, complement factors, TGF-β1 and PGE2 | -Human PBMC: inhibition of proliferation, migration and cytokine secretion -Human chondrocytes: increased aggrecan gene expression | Articular cartilage repair | |
| Adipose, bone marrow, Wharton’s jelly | Complete secretome | -Human monocyte: increased migration -Human macrophage: increased differentiation -Human endothelial cells: induced pro-angiogenic phenotype -Murine vasculature: increased vascularization in Matrigel plug assay | Ischemic diseases | |
| Bone marrow | Complete secretome including IL-5, IL-6, IL-8, IL-9, IP-10 MCP-1, FGF-2 and VEGF | Human keratinocytes in hypoxic, low serum culture: increased migration and proliferation, cell spreading and F-actin expression | Chronic wounds | |
| Umbilical cord | Complete secretome | -Rat bone marrow MSC from aged animals: increased cell growth, differentiation, potential, decreased senescence -Aged rats: improved bone formation capacity | Age-related osteoporosis | |
| Bone marrow | miR-21-5p from EXO | Human engineered cardiac tissue: increased contractility, calcium handling | Cardiac therapies | |
| Bone marrow | Complete secretome including EXO-related proteins related to the ubiquitin-proteosome and histone systems | Human neural progenitors: induced neural differentiation Rat model of Parkinson’s disease: rescued dopamine neurons, increased behavioral performance in staircase test | Parkinson’s disease | |
| Adipose | Complete secretome, soluble factors and EV cargo including proteins involved in RNA metabolism and miRNAs targeting processes involved in regeneration, regulation of inflammation | -Human and rat cell lines: increased proliferation and differentiation, protection against senescence -Mouse model of skeletal muscle injury: enhanced rate of regeneration after acute damage | Muscle regeneration | |
| Adipose | Complete secretome including TIMPs and cartilage protecting factors | TNFα-stimulated primary articular chondrocytes: blunted hypertrophy, reduced levels of osteocalcin and collagen X and MMP13 activity | Osteoarthritis | |
| Adipose | Innate and IFNγ preconditioned/complete secretome including > 60 secreted cytokines/chemokines and >240 EV-miRNAs | -Macrophages: increased anti-inflammatory phenotype marker CD163 -Chondrocytes: reduced inflammation marker VCAM1 | Joint disease | |
| Cornea | Complete secretome | Corneal endothelial cell injury | ||
| Adipose | Concentrated secretome including GDNF and FGF2 | Rat model of bilateral abdominal cryptorchidism: restored seminiferous tubules, increased | Non-obstructive spermatogenesis disorders | |
| Cornea | EXO | -Cultured corneal epithelial cells: increased migration -Murine epithelial debridement wounds: increased wound healing | Ocular surface injuries | |
| Bone marrow, adipose | Complete secretome | Hypoxic primary rat alveolar epithelial cells: increased viability, reduced secretion of inflammatory mediators, enhanced IL-10 production, increased active MMPs | Pulmonary syndromes | |
| Wharton’s jelly, bone marrow | EXO | Mouse model of bronchopulmonary dysplasia: ameliorated alveolar simplification, fibrosis and pulmonary vascular remodeling due to hyperoxia | Pulmonary disease |
Rodent MSC secretome components, targets, effects, and potential therapeutic uses.
FIGURE 2Altering the mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) secretome through in vitro manipulation. In order to increase the secretion of desired molecules, such as proteins or miRNA, MSCs are manipulated in culture through either priming or genetic engineering. The four main approaches of priming are (i) addition of pharmacological/chemical agents, (ii) treatment with cytokines, (iii) culture in 3D cultures/bio-scaffolds, and (iv) culture under induced hypoxic conditions. Genetic engineering is used to express/overexpress specific proteins or miRNA by a targeted RNA or DNA transfer into the MSCs via transduction, transfer by virus or viral vector, or transfection, transfer through various biological/chemical/physical approaches. DMOG, dimethyloxalylglycine; LPS, lipopolysaccharides; PPS, pentosan polysulfate; IL, interleukin; IFN, interferon; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; 3D, 3-dimensional; O2, oxygen.
Manipulation of human MSCs to optimize the therapeutic effects of the MSC secretome.
| Protein profile in EXO (BMMSC) | Retinal cell CM (TNF-α) | MSC CM and EXO had neuro-protective effects on retinal ganglion cells, increased PEDF and VEGF-A in primed EXO | Optic nerve injury | |
| Immune-modulatory properties (Gingival MSC) | IL-1β | Overexpression of TGF-β and MMP pathway agonists (MMP-1, MMP-9), Primed MSC CM promoted cell migration, epidermal-dermal junction formation, inflammation reduction | Wound healing | |
| Protein profile in EXO (BMMSC) | Hypoxia | Exosomes from primed MSC are enriched with specific subclassifications of proteins, including secretory and ECM associated proteins, EXO enhances secretion of growth factors of neuroblast-like cells | CNS related diseases | |
| Immune-modulatory properties (UCMSC) | 3D culture | CM had increased anti-inflammatory profile (IL-10, LIF) and trophic factors (PDGF-BB, FGF-2, I-309, GM-CSF, increased therapeutic effect | Rheumatoid arthritis | |
| Senescence and immune-modulatory properties (BMMSC) | Substance P | Increased secretion of PDGF-BB in primed MSC. Primed MSC CM increased viability of retinal pigmented epithelium | Age related macular degeneration | |
| Metabolic pathways (BMMSC) | INF-γ/TNF-α | Primed MSC show increased glycolysis and fatty acid oxidation, glycolysis is linked to MSC-mediated T cell suppression through the JAK/STAT1/IDO axis by posttranslational modification (glycosylation) of STAT1 | General MSC therapy: immune-modulatory properties | |
| Induction of quiescent state (BMMSC) | Hypoxia, SF-media | Increased survival, adaptive response mechanism after transplantation, primed MSC maintained their stemness by reaching a quiescent state. | General MSC therapy | |
| Senescence and immune-modulatory properties (BMMSC) | 3D culture in FBS-containing medium and xeno-free medium | MSC in 3D culture contained their immune-suppressive profile over multiple passages. Upregulation of COX-2, TNF alpha induced protein 6, SCT-1. Secretion of PGE2, TSG-6, STC-1 | General MSC therapy: immune-modulatory properties | |
| miRNA-26a-5p (BMMSC) | Lentivirus | Alleviation of damages on synovial fibroblasts by targeting PTGS2 | Osteoarthritis | |
| miRNA-181a (UCMSC) | Lentivirus | Reduced inflammatory response and promoted Treg polarization | Myocardial infarction | |
| miRNA-122 (ADMSC) | Lipofection | Reduced collagen, inhibition of pro-inflammatory cytokines, reduction of liver enzymes, elevated expression of antifibrotic proteins | Liver fibrosis | |
| miRNA-126 (UCMSC) | Lipofection | Alleviated effects of hypoglycemia induced inflammation | Retinal inflammation in diabetes | |
| VEGF (BMMSC) | Microporation | Improved angiogenic potential | Peripheral artery disease | |
| CXCR4 (BMMSC, ADMSC) | Microporation in combination with minicircle transfection | Increased homing in a skin wound mouse model | General MSC therapy: homing | |
| Herpesviral immunoevasion protein US11 (BMMSC) | Lentivirus | Downregulation of MHCI proteins, increased persistence of MSC in immune-competent mice with depleted NK | General MSC therapy/increase of immune evasiveness | |
| Cytomegaloviral immunoevasion proteins US6/US11 (not specified) | Retrovirus | Downregulation of HLA-I, protection against NK in vitro, increased liver engraftment in pre-immune fetal sheep | General MSC therapy/increase of immune evasiveness | |
| HSVtk (BMMSC) | Retrovirus | Clinical trial, administration of transduced MSC in combination with prodrug ganciclovir: 4 of 6 patients reached stable disease, safe and feasible | Gastrointestinal adenocarcinoma | |
| HSVtk (BMMSC) | Retrovirus | Clinical trial, administration of transduced MSC in combination with prodrug ganciclovir: 50% of patients reached stable disease, safe and feasible | Gastrointestinal adenocarcinoma | |
| CD::UPRT or HSVtk (ADMSC) | Systemic administration of human CD::UPRT-MSC or HSVtk-MSC in combination with 5-FC and ganciclovir inhibited growth of lung metastases in mice | Gastrointestinal adenocarcinoma | ||
Manipulation of laboratory rodent MSCs to optimize the therapeutic effects of the MSC secretome.
FIGURE 3Diseases in veterinary species as translational models for human disease. Small companion animals (i.e., dogs and cats), as well as large animals (i.e., pigs and horses), develop pathologies that are similar to diseases in humans and thus, are used as translational animal models for neurological, cardiac, pulmonary, musculoskeletal, nephrological, gastroenterological, dermatological, infectious, and cancerous, diseases. Body sizes are not to scale. IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; CKD, chronic kidney disease; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Small companion animal MSC secretome components, targets, effects, and potential therapeutic uses.
Horse MSC secretome components, targets, effects, and potential therapeutic uses.
| Peripheral blood | ET1, IL-8, PDGF-AA, IGFBP2 | Endothelial cells: increased angiogenesis | Tissue regeneration | |
| Bone marrow | Glycosaminoglycan | BM-MSC: decreased PDL | Maintaining stemness | |
| Peripheral blood | Complete secretome | Dermal fibroblasts: increased migration, altered gene expression | Cutaneous wound healing | |
| Amnion | Complete secretome, EV | LPS stimulated and unstimulated alveolar macrophages: cytokine secretion | Inflammatory lung diseases | |
| Peripheral blood | Antimicrobial peptides | Cutaneous wound healing | ||
| Peripheral blood | Complete secretome | Dermal fibroblasts, healthy and dysregulated: alterations in morphology, proliferation, gene expression, contractile capacity and susceptibility to senescence | Fibroproliferative disorders | |
| Bone marrow | Complete secretome | Corneal stromal cells: increased migration | Corneal wound healing | |
| Bone marrow | Galectin-1/3 | BMMSC: increased motility | Osteoarthritis | |
| Peripheral blood | PAI-1, tenascin-C | Dermal fibroblasts, mouse skin wounds: increased migration, wound closure | Cutaneous wound healing | |
| Amnion | MicroRNAs | Secretome not tested with targets in a model system | Regenerative medicine | |
| Adipose | EV derived small RNAs | Secretome not tested with targets in a model system | Regenerative medicine | |
| Bone marrow | Inflammatory, angiogenic proteins | Secretome not tested with targets in a model system | Osteoarthritis | |
| Peripheral blood | Complete secretome, cysteine proteases | Bacterial skin infections | ||
| Peripheral blood | CXCL6 | Neutrophils: chemotaxis | Tissue repair |