| Literature DB >> 34959314 |
Maxim Karagyaur1,2, Stalik Dzhauari2, Nataliya Basalova1,2, Natalia Aleksandrushkina1,2, Georgy Sagaradze1, Natalia Danilova2, Pavel Malkov2, Vladimir Popov1,2, Mariya Skryabina2, Anastasia Efimenko1,2, Vsevolod Tkachuk1,2.
Abstract
Multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are considered to be critical contributors to injured tissue repair and regeneration, and MSC-based therapeutic approaches have been applied to many peripheral and central neurologic disorders. It has been demonstrated that the beneficial effects of MSC are mainly mediated by the components of their secretome. In the current study, we have explored the neuroprotective potential of the MSC secretome in a rat model of intracerebral hemorrhage and shown that a 10-fold concentrated secretome of human MSC and its combination with the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) provided a better survival and neurological outcome of rats within 14 days of intracerebral hemorrhage compared to the negative (non-treated) and positive (BDNF) control groups. We found that it was due to the ability of MSC secretome to stimulate neuron survival under conditions of glutamate-induced neurotoxicity. However, the lesion volume did not shrink in these rats, and this also correlated with prominent microglia activation. We hypothesize that this could be caused by the species-specificity of the used MSC secretome and provide evidence to confirm this. Thus, we have found that allogenic rat MSC secretome was more effective than xenogenic human MSC secretome in the rat intracerebral hemorrhage model: it reduced the volume of the lesion and promoted excellent survival and neurological outcome of the treated rats.Entities:
Keywords: allogenicity; brain-derived neurotrophic factor; glutamate-induced neurotoxicity; intracerebral hemorrhage; microglia activation; multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC); secretome; stroke
Year: 2021 PMID: 34959314 PMCID: PMC8707464 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics13122031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Figure 1The results of in vivo studies of the neuroprotective activity of the non-concentrated human MSC secretome (hMSC1x): (a) survival of the experimental animals; (b) neurological status of the experimental animals (SO—sham operated); and the cognitive status of the experimental animals: (c) short-term memory (24 h after the intracerebral hemorrhage); (d) long-term memory (10 days after the intracerebral hemorrhage). The dashed line corresponds to the memory performance of SO animals. Data is presented as a median (25%; 75%). n = 10; no significant differences between the groups.
Figure 2The results of in vivo studies of the neuroprotective activity of the 10 fold-concentrated human MSC secretome (hMSC10x): (a) survival of the experimental animals; (b) neurological status of the experimental animals at three and 10 days after the intracerebral hemorrhage (SO—sham operated). Data is presented as a median (25%; 75%). [*—p = 0.006; n ≥ 10; hMSC10x vs. Control; two-sided Fisher’s exact test].
Figure 3The results of the MRI examination of the brain at day 11 after the intracerebral hemorrhage. On the diagram: the blue dashed line equals the volume of the brain lesion site in the SO animals. Data is presented as a median (25%; 75%). [*—H (4,35) = 11.841; p = 0.019; n ≥ 8; ANOVA on ranks].
Figure 4The results of the histochemical examination of the brain at day 14 after the intracerebral hemorrhage. On the photos: the red dashed ovals restrict the injured loci. On the diagram: the blue dashed line equals the area of the brain lesion site in the SO animals. Data is presented as a median (25%; 75%). n = 5; no significant differences between the groups.
Figure 5The results of the immunohistochemical staining of brain slices at day 14 after the intracerebral hemorrhage: (a) immunostaining for CD68; (b) immunostaining for CD163. On the photos: the green staining corresponds to the CD68 or CD163 staining; the blue staining corresponds to cell nuclei. On the diagram: the blue dashed line equals the area of the brain lesion site in the SO animals. Data is presented as a median (25%; 75%). [*—H (4,40) = 10.404, p = 0.034, n ≥ 9, ANOVA on ranks; #—H (5,48) = 16.689, p = 0.005, n ≥ 9, ANOVA on ranks].
Figure 6The results of in vivo studies of the neuroprotective activity of the 10 fold-concentrated rat (allogenic) MSC secretome (rMSC10x): (a) the dynamics of survival of the experimental animals; (b) neurological status of the experimental animals at days three and 10 after the intracerebral hemorrhage (SO—sham operated) [*—p = 0.006, n = 10, two-sided Fisher’s exact test; **—p = 0.0004, n = 18, two-sided Fisher’s exact test]; (c) samples of MR images and histological slices of the brains obtained from the experimental animals (the red dashed ovals restrict the injured loci); (d) results of the MRI examination of the brain at day 11 after the intracerebral hemorrhage [#—H (2, 21) = 11.033; p = 0.004; n ≥ 8; ANOVA on ranks]; (e) results of the histochemical examination of the brain at day 14 after the intracerebral hemorrhage [##—H (2, 12) = 7.580; p = 0.023; n = 5; ANOVA on ranks]. Data is presented as a median (25%; 75%).
Figure 7The results of in vitro studies of the neuroprotective activity of MSC secretomes (hMSC1x; MSC-B; hMSC10x; rMSC10x): (a) the dynamics of survival of SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells under glutamate-induced neurotoxicity conditions [*—H (5,66) < 45.430; p < 0.001 vs. control (C+); n = 12; ANOVA on ranks]; (b) neurite outgrowth in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cell culture [**—H (5,24) = 17.354; p = 0.004 vs. control; n = 5; ANOVA on ranks]. Data is presented as a median (25%; 75%).