| Literature DB >> 35189962 |
Senthilkumar Alagesan1, Jack Brady1, Declan Byrnes1, Juan Fandiño1, Claire Masterson1, Sean McCarthy1, John Laffey1,2, Daniel O'Toole3.
Abstract
Cell therapy, particularly mesenchymal stem/stromal (MSC) therapy, has been investigated for a wide variety of disease indications, particularly those with inflammatory pathologies. However, recently it has become evident that the MSC is far from a panacea. In this review we will look at current and future strategies that might overcome limitations in efficacy. Many of these take their inspiration from stem cell niche and the mechanism of MSC action in response to the injury microenvironment, or from previous gene therapy work which can now benefit from the added longevity and targeting ability of a live cell vector. We will also explore the nascent field of extracellular vesicle therapy and how we are already seeing enhancement protocols for this exciting new drug. These enhanced MSCs will lead the way in more difficult to treat diseases and restore potency where donors or manufacturing practicalities lead to diminished MSC effect.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapy; Extracellular vesicles; Priming; Stem cells
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35189962 PMCID: PMC8860135 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-022-02747-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Comparison of drug loading approaches
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Passive Loading | Simple method | Drug can alter cell properties |
| Uses concentration gradient | Passive unloading | |
| Not suitable for hydrophobic drugs | ||
| Receptor mediated loading | Direct targeting toward receptor | May require use of nanoparticles |
| Expensive ligands | ||
| Physical loading | Tried and tested methods | Invasive |
| Impacts cell viability | ||
| Liposome-mediated Loading | Well researched | Expensive method when scaled up |
| Can be enhanced by targeting receptors/surface modification | ||
| Protects the delivered drug | ||
| EV vector loading | Naïve MSC EVs are therapeutic | Not fully characterised |
| Easily isolated | Poor targeting in some diseases | |
| Proven to carry cargo from parent cell | Can be difficult to obtain large numbers |
Small molecule enhancers of MSC efficacy
| Pharmacological/small molecule | In vitro or In vivo | Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Valproic acid + sphingosine-1-phosphate | In vitro | Enhanced migration, proliferation, colony forming units. Anti-inflammatory properties | Lim et al. [ |
| Desferrioxamine (DFO) | In vitro | Low dose led to reduced mitochondrial activity and apoptosis of MSCs | Fujisawa et al. [ |
| Dimethyloxalylglycine (DMOG) | In vitro In vivo | Increased cell survival and pro-angiogeneic factors (HIF-1α, VEGF). In vivo (rat myocardial infarction model) DMOG-MSCs reduced heart infarct size with improved therapeutic benefits | Liu et al. [ |
| Anesthetic isoflurane | In vitro In vivo | Short low dose exposure enhanced MSC survival and migration. Upregulated HIF-1α, SDF-1, CXCR4. Activation of Akt similar to hypoxia treatment. In vivo (Rat middle cerebral artery occlusion model) isoflurane priming enhanced MSC engraftment in ischemic brain and improved outcome in mouse model of stroke | Sun et al. [ |
| All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) | In vitro In vivo | ATRA increased MSC expression of cell survival and growth factors (COX-2, HIF-1α, CXCR4, CCR2, VEGF, Ang-2, Ang-4). In vivo (rat wound healing model) ATRA primed MSCs were superior in wound closure with improved angiogenesis | Pourjafar et al. [ |
| Rapamycin, everolimus, FK506 or cyclosporine A | In vitro In vivo | Immunosuppressant treated MSCs fivefold more suppressive of T-cell proliferation in vitro. MSCs adsorbed and released drugs to host cells in vitro. In vivo (humanised GvHD mouse model) low dose primed MSCs significantly inhibited onset of disease compared to untreated MSCs | Girdlestone et al. [ |
| Adenosine receptor activation | In vitro | Activation of A1R (via 2-chloro-N6-cyclopentyl-adenosine (CCPA)) led to greater osteogenic differentiation via induction of osteogenic markers RUNX2 & alkaline phosphate (ALP) & mineralisation of extracellular matrix | D'Alimonte et al. [ |
| Rapamycin | In vitro | Short but not long incubation with rapamycin enhanced MSC immunosuppressive effect. Effect mainly via upregulation of COX-2 and PGE2. mTOR inhibition significantly reduced IFN-γ induced MHC-II on MSC | Wang et al. [ |
| 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) | In vitro In vivo | In vitro enhanced expression of cardiomyogenesis, cell adhesion and angiogenesis genes. Intra-myocardial transplantation of DNP pre-conditioned MSCs led to enhanced adhesion to myocardial surface with more viable cells. Improvement in cardiac function, less scar formation, enhanced maintenance of left ventricular wall thickness and increased angiogenesis | Khan et al. [ |
| All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) | In vitro | ATRA treated MSCs in co-culture assays with AS patient’s PBMCs. Enhanced MSC IL-6 secretion. ATRA treated MSCs reduced Th17, T-regs, TNF-α, IFN-γ | Li et al. [ |
| 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine (5-aza-dC) | In vitro | Methyltransferase inhibitor 5-aza-dC elevated endothelial markers (CD31, CD105, eNOS, VE-cadherin), promoted angiogenesis in matrigel assays. Upregulated endothelial differentiation inducers (VEGFA, ANGPT2, FGF2, FGF9 and ETS1) | Xu et al. [ |
| All-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) | In vivo | In vivo (mouse elastase induced emphysema model) ATRA + MSCs combination increased static lung compliance, mean linear intercepts & alveolar surface area. P70S6 Kinase-1 overexpressing MSCs + ATRA even more beneficial. ATRA activated P70S6Kinase-1 enhanced accumulation and extended survival of MSCs | Takeda et al. [ |
| β3 adrenergic agonists (β3AR) | In vivo | Agonist with CXCR4 antagonist mobilised MSCs to blood stream in rodents. Reversal of CXCL12 gradient across bone marrow endothelium and production of endocannabinoids. Significant induction of bone formation in rat spine fusion model | Fellous et al. [ |
| Lithium + valproic acid | In vivo | Intranasal delivery of lithium and valproic acid treated MSCs in Huntington’s disease mouse model enhanced open field test, ambulatory distance and mean velocity. Benefits to motor function, reduced striatal neuronal loss and Huntington aggregates versus naïve MSCs. Increased MSC trophic effects, antioxidants, cytokine/chemokine receptors, migration, mitochondrial energy metabolism and stress response signaling pathways. Pre-treated MSCs survived longer after transplantation | Linares et al. [ |
Overview of modification techniques
| Modification strategy | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| MSCs for drug delivery | Easily performed in culture | Short cell life after engraftment |
| GMP grade existing drugs more readily available | Drug effects on stem cell itself | |
| Not possible to load all drugs | ||
| Required short interval between loading and administration | ||
| Anti-microbial enhancement | Allows specific targeting of identified pathogens | Of less relevance outside infectious disease |
| Licensing strategies | Rely on endogenous mechanisms | Full licensing environment difficult to recreate |
| Proven cryopreservation compatibility | ||
| Hypoxia priming | Enhances cell proliferation during manufacture as well as efficacy | Requires specific manufacturing equipment |
| Differentiation prior to engraftment | Can be long and difficult manufacturing process | |
| Gene modifications | A wide range of possible therapeutic proteins can be expressed | Unpredictable effects of transgene on stem cell |
| Risk of stem cell mutagenesis with some vector options | ||
| Small molecule priming | Inexpensive and simple methodology | Possible off-target effects on MSC |
| Wide availability of GMP compounds | ||
| EV enhancement | Increased safety / lower immunogenicity due to no cell involved | Heterogeneity within EV batches due to culturing and isolation methods |
| Easier storage and delivery of therapeutic | Large scale production still problematic |