| Literature DB >> 34220455 |
Paula V Monje1,2, Lingxiao Deng1,2, Xiao-Ming Xu1,2.
Abstract
The benefits of transplanting cultured Schwann cells (SCs) for the treatment of spinal cord injury (SCI) have been systematically investigated in experimental animals since the early 1990s. Importantly, human SC (hSC) transplantation for SCI has advanced to clinical testing and safety has been established via clinical trials conducted in the USA and abroad. However, multiple barriers must be overcome to enable accessible and effective treatments for SCI patients. This review presents available information on hSC transplantation for SCI with the intention to uncover gaps in our knowledge and discuss areas for future development. To this end, we introduce the historical progression of the work that supports existing and prospective clinical initiatives and explain the reasons for the choice of hSCs while also addressing their limitations as cell therapy products. A search of the relevant literature revealed that rat SCs have served as a preclinical model of reference since the onset of investigations, and that hSC transplants are relatively understudied, possibly due to the sophisticated resources and expertise needed for the traditional processing of hSC cultures from human nerves. In turn, we reason that additional experimentation and a reexamination of the available data are needed to understand the therapeutic value of hSC transplants taking into consideration that the manufacturing of the hSCs themselves may require further development for extended uses in basic research and clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: Schwann cells; biotherapeutic products; cell therapy; clinical trials; functional recovery; myelination; regeneration; spinal cord injury
Year: 2021 PMID: 34220455 PMCID: PMC8249939 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2021.690894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
FIGURE 1Modalities of hSC-based autotransplantation therapies for neuroprotection and regeneration in the CNS. Most clinical initiatives in SCI and other paradigms have used autologous cultured (right, cell therapy) or uncultured (left, tissue therapy) hSCs from sural nerve delivered within or around the injury area (diagram). The established hSCs are usually purified and expanded before collecting them as a single cell suspension for implantation. Delayed dissociation of pre-degenerated (cultured) nerve fibers induces SC activation and enhances recovery of cells at passage-zero (P0). Representative images of dissected sural nerve fascicles in culture medium (bottom left) and intermediate steps in the isolation and culturing of hSCs are shown. Culture is usually carried out up to passage-2 to generate hSCs ready to transplant and stocks for banking. Digested fibers: nerve fascicles during enzymatic dissociation. Adherent cells: primary cells right after isolation showing abundant myelin debris. Propagation (with mitogenic factors) and subculture: purified hSCs at low (lower image, subconfluent cells) and high density (upper image, confluent cells).
Advantages and limitations of cultured hSCs for grafting strategies.
| Advantages | Limitations | |
| Origin and accessibility | hSCs are widely distributed and accessible cells in peripheral nerves and the skin. | A nerve segment needs to be sacrificed for cell isolation |
| Tissue procurement | Sources are varied. Tissues may be autologous or allogenic. Cadaveric biospecimens are also suitable. | Fairly invasive surgical intervention is needed for nerve harvesting with morbidity to the donor and risk of sensory deficits, pain and neuroma formation. |
| Cell processing | Feasible and fairly reproducible when optimized for GMP manufacturing. | Labor-intensive and time consuming (several weeks) to obtain enough cells with high associated costs. Isolation of primary cells may be compromised by low yields or poor viability. |
| Expandability | Significant amplification in culture is feasible. An excess of hSCs is often produced using nerve explants >10 cm in length. | Chemical mitogens and animal serum cannot be avoided. High lot-to-lot variability in total cell yields may be expected. Expansion over passage 4–5 is limited by senescence. |
| Purity | Achieving >98% hSC purity is feasible by standard methods. | Fibroblast contamination may be hard to control in certain populations. Clinically-relevant methods for effective cell purification need to be developed |
| Quality control | Fairly simple and straightforward phenotypic characterization by immunological methods. | Expanded populations are heterogeneous (donor-or lot-dependent). The quality/quantity of the populations can vary with subculture |
| Biological activity | Normal hSCs are proliferative, unipotent and phenotypically stable under established growth conditions. | Mechanism of action is complex. Biological activity is hard to determine and quantify by |
| Safety | No indication of transformation | Investigations are limited to a handful of studies. More data are needed. |
| Banking and transfer | Cryogenic storage can be implemented at any passage with high recovery after thawing. | Feasibility is contingent upon initial yields and expandability of the stocks. |
FIGURE 2The path to clinical translation of SC transplantation in SCI. The timeline summarizes milestones and selected major achievements in support of the overall strategy. The history of work explaining progress made since the conception of the original idea (Bunge, 1975) to the completion of the first FDA-sanctioned trial is described in the text. Much work was done in the initial phases to (i) develop technologies for SC culturing, and (ii) obtain proof-of-concept data of SC transplants in animal models of SCI. Notice the 20-year gap between the first reported animal study (Kuhlengel et al., 1990b) and the first clinical study (Saberi et al., 2008). FDA approval for the first safety trial in the USA was gained in 2012 (Xu, 2012) and the results released in 2017 (Anderson et al., 2017).
FIGURE 3Literature review on SC transplantation in SCI. A PubMed search using the terms “spinal cord injury” and “Schwann cell transplantation” as entry key words retrieved only 14 publications on the transplantation of hSCs (diverse origin) in non-clinical and clinical settings during the period 1990–2021 (a,b). This time frame was selected to take into consideration that the first published study on SC transplants in SCI dates from 1990 (Kuhlengel et al., 1990b). Our search did not discriminate whether the SCs were nerve- or stem cell-derived but we excluded studies on ex-vivo transplants. Studies on non-human SCs from a variety of sources and developmental stages were extensive (88.4%) but the use of adult tissue-derived rat SCs was prevalent (c). A categorization of available studies according to the type of assessments performed in basic and clinical studies combined is shown in (d). The total number of scrutinized studies in the most relevant categories are noted in the pie charts.
Comparison of the rat and hSC responses in spinal cord lesions.
| Assessments | Results | |
| Survival and proliferation | Rat | A proportion of the grafted cells proliferate and survive in the long-term though there are discrepancies in independent studies regarding the extent of survivability in the initial stages |
| Human | Variable rate of hSC survival (lot-to-lot) but poor overall in contusion injuries with a low proliferation rate ( | |
| Migration and localization of the transplants | Rat and human | Cells are restricted to the site of implantation. SC migration around the lesion can be improved with treatments in rat SCs but no information is available for hSCs |
| Axon growth into SC implants | Rat | Robust ingrowth of sensory and propriospinal axons into the SC graft. Brainstem axon growth has been reported in contusion and transection injuries but axons remain confined to the injury site unless the transplants are supplemented with additional factors |
| Human | Axon growth is contingent upon graft survival ( | |
| Glial scar | Rat | Well-developed in the interface between the spared CNS tissue and the SC graft with a clear boundary between astrocytes and the SC graft unless treatments are provided to reduce environmental inhibition |
| Human | Relatively good integration of hSC graft -spinal cord in contusion and transection injuries ( | |
| Endogenous SC response | Rat and human | Abundant host-derived SCs develop in the lesion site and intermingle with the grafted cells. Studies on hSCs have not quantitatively addressed the contribution of endogenous SCs in the grafts |
| Ensheathment and Myelination | Rat | Abundant myelin of PNS origin is found in the SC-grafts. Grafted and endogenous SCs provide ensheathment to axons and form myelin within the grafts though variation is expected in independent studies |
| Human | Myelin develops in hSC grafts but most fibers are non-myelinated ( | |
| Stability of the transplants | Rat | Long lasting (>6 months) and apparently stable unless signs of immune rejection are evident |
| Human | Variable and batch-dependent ( | |
| Tumorigenicity | Rat | Reported for skin-derived SCs but generally not observed using nerve-derived SCs |
| Human | Not observed in CNS and PNS models of xenografting ( | |
| Functional outcome | Rat | Modest but significant motor and sensory improvement has been reported (various tests) though variable outcomes are possible in the absence of additional therapeutic interventions |
| Human | Some improvement (in transection injury) or not determined (in contusive SCI), ( | |
| Therapeutic enhancement | Rat | SC-elicited responses such as survivability post-transplantation, axon growth, and functional recovery can be improved with appropriate combination treatments |
| Human | Fairly unexplored with the exception of increased astrocyte migration into SC grafts with daily infusions of IN-1 antibody and reduction of CST die-back with delivery of acidic FGF/fibrin glue ( | |