| Literature DB >> 35505419 |
Mengqin Yuan1, Xue Hu1, Lichao Yao1, Yingan Jiang2, Lanjuan Li3,4.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) transplantation, as an alternative strategy to orthotopic liver transplantation, has been evaluated for treating end-stage liver disease. Although the therapeutic mechanism of MSC transplantation remains unclear, accumulating evidence has demonstrated that MSCs can regenerate tissues and self-renew to repair the liver through differentiation into hepatocyte-like cells, immune regulation, and anti-fibrotic mechanisms. Multiple clinical trials have confirmed that MSC transplantation restores liver function and alleviates liver damage. A sufficient number of MSCs must be home to the target tissues after administration for successful application. However, inefficient homing of MSCs after systemic administration is a major limitation in MSC therapy. Here, we review the mechanisms and clinical application status of MSCs in the treatment of liver disease and comprehensively summarize the molecular mechanisms of MSC homing, and various strategies for promoting MSC homing to improve the treatment of liver disease.Entities:
Keywords: Improvement strategies; Liver diseases; MSC homing; Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35505419 PMCID: PMC9066724 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-022-02858-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 8.079
Fig. 1The mechanism of therapeutic effect of MSCs in liver disease. MSCs repair injured liver tissue via differentiation, immunomodulatory effects, and anti-fibrotic effects. MSCs, mesenchymal stem cells; HSC, hepatic stellate cell. ECM extracellular matrix, M1 classically activated macrophage, M2 alternatively activated macrophage, DC dendritic cell, NK natural killer cell, B B lymphocyte, Treg regulatory cell
Summary of the intracellular signaling pathways in terms of MSCs regulating other cells
| Liver disease | MSCs source | Mechanism | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liver sterile inflammatory injury | BM-MSCs | Promote Hippo signaling pathway | Shift macrophage polarization from M1 to M2 phenotype, diminish inflammatory mediators, and reduce hepatocellular damage | Li et al. [ |
| Not mentioned | BM-MSCs | Inhibit CD25 expression and LKB1-AMPK-mTOR pathway | Potentiate T cell suppression | Yoo et al. [ |
| Graft versus host disease | hP-MSCs | Regulate the crosstalk between Nrf2 and NF-κB signaling pathway | Inhibit the expression of PD-1 in CD4+ IL-10+ T cells, mitigate liver damage and improve redox metabolism | Zhang et al. [ |
| Not mentioned | BM-MSCs | Activate Notch pathway | Increase Treg induction | Rashedi et al. [ |
| Liver fibrosis | UC-MSCs | Strongly inhibit TGFβ signaling of HSCs | Inhibit HSC activation, reduce ECM deposition and liver fibrosis | An et al. [ |
| Thioacetamide-induced hepatic fibrosis | BM-MSCs | Inhibit TGF-β/Smad pathway in HSCs | Reduce hepatic collagen distribution, lowered the hydroxyproline content, and rescued liver function impairment | Jang et al. [ |
| Liver fibrosis | BM-MSCs | Activate Notch1 signaling pathway and inhibit PI3K/Akt pathway | Inhibit the proliferation of HSCs | Chen et al. [ |
| Liver fibrosis | BM-MSCs derived exosomes | Inhibit Wnt/β-catenin pathway | Inhibit HSC activation, reduce collagen accumulation, enhance liver functionality, inhibition of inflammation, and increased hepatocyte regeneration | Rong et al. [ |
Clinical trials using MSCs to treat liver disease
| Liver disease | MSCs source | Injection route | Enrolled patients | Cell doses | Follow-up | Clinical results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decompensated liver cirrhosis | UC-MSCs | Vein | Control group ( | 0.5 × 106/kg | 48 weeks | Significantly reduced the volume of ascites and improvement of liver function (increased of serum albumin levels, decrease in total serum bilirubin levels, and decreased in the sodium model for end-stage liver disease scores) | Zhang et al. [ |
| Liver cirrhosis | AD-MSCs | Liver | Pre-MSCs therapy group ( | 1.0 × 108 | 6 months | Significantly improved liver function, METAVIR score, Child–Pugh score, MELD score, and quality of life for patients with liver cirrhosis | Huang et al. [ |
| Alcoholic cirrhosis | BM-MSCs | Hepatic artery | Pre-MSCs therapy group ( | 5.0 × 107/kg | 12 weeks | Improved histological features and Child–Pugh score, decreased transforming growth factor-β1, type 1 collagen and α-smooth muscle actin level | Jang et al. [ |
| Alcoholic cirrhosis | BM-MSCs | Hepatic artery | Control group ( | 5.0 × 107/kg | 12 months | Improved tissue fibrosis (reduction in the proportion of collagen) and liver function (improvement of the Child–Pugh scores) | Suk et al. [ |
| HCV-positive patients with end-stage liver disease | BM-MSCs | Peripheral vein | MSCs transplantation group ( | 1.0 × 106/kg | 26 weeks | Improved liver synthetic functions (improved ALT, AST and S-albumin levels, as well as the Child–Pugh score and performance score) and hepatic fibrosis (decreased the serum levels of the hepatic fibrosis markers, PIIICP and PIIINP) | Salama et al. [ |
| Primary biliary cirrhosis with a suboptimal response to UDCA treatment | UC-MSCs | Peripheral vein | Primary biliary cirrhosis patients with a suboptimal response to UDCA treatment ( | 0.5 × 106/kg | 48 weeks | Improved liver function (serum alkaline phosphatase and γ-glutamyltransferase levels decreased) and clinical symptoms (fatigue and pruritus were alleviated) | Wang et al. [ |
| Liver cirrhosis caused by autoimmune diseases | BM-MSCs, UC-MSCs and cord blood-MSCs (CB-MSCs) | Peripheral vein | UC-MSCs transplantation group ( | 1.0 × 106/kg | 2 years | Reduced the mean total bilirubin and prothrombin time, improved the average serum albumin levels and MELD score, without serious adverse events | Liang et al. [ |
| Decompensated liver cirrhosis after splenectomy | Autologous bone marrow | Portal vein | Autologous bone marrow transfusion group ( | 1.0–2.0 × 106/kg | 6 months | Improved liver function (improved ALB, ALT, and cholinesterase levels and decreased liver stiffness measurement and AFP) | Zhang et al. [ |
| ACLF | BM-MSCs | Peripheral vein | Stem cell group ( | 1.0 × 106/kg | 90 days | Improved Child–Pugh score, MELD, and ACLF classification | Schacher et al. [ |
| HBV-related ACLF | BM-MSCs | Peripheral vein | Standard medical therapy group ( | 1.0–10 × 105/kg | 24 weeks | Improved liver function, decreased the incidence of severe infection, and significantly improved the 24-week survival rate | Lin et al. [ |
| HBV-related ACLF | UC-MSCs | Cubital vein | MSCs transplantation group ( | 0.5 × 106/kg | 72 weeks | Partially improved liver function (improve serum total bilirubin and Model for End-Stage Liver Disease scores), reduced the incidence of severe infections (reduce the incidence of severe infection, and the mortality of multiple organ failure and severe infection), and reduced patient mortality | Shi et al. [ |
| Preparing for liver transplantation | BM-MSCs | Peripheral vein | MSCs transplantation group ( | 1.0–2.0 × 106/kg | 12 months | Induced mild positive changes of immunoregulatory T cells and NK cells in peripheral blood | Casiraghi et al. [ |
| Decompensated cirrhosis | BM-MSCs | Peripheral vein | MSCs transplantation group ( | 1.95 × 108 | 12 months | No beneficial effect (no effect on the Child–Pugh score, MELD-Na score, serum albumin, INR, serum transaminases and liver volume) | Mohamadnejad et al. [ |
| HBV-induced liver failure | BM-MSCs | Hepatic artery | MSCs transplantation group ( | Not mentioned | 192 weeks | Improved the short-term curative effect (improve the levels of ALB, total bilirubin, and prothrombin time and MELD score), and not improve the long-term curative effect (no effect on the incidence of HCC and mortality) | Peng et al. [ |
| Liver cirrhosis | BM-MSCs | Peripheral vein | Pre-MSCs therapy group ( | 1.0 × 106/kg | 6 months | MSCs could not reach the liver in a sufficient amount | Kantarcıoğlu et al. [ |
Fig. 2The homing mechanism of MSCs. Schematic summarizing the molecular mechanisms facilitating each step of MSC homing
Fig. 3Various routes of MSC transplantation in liver disease. Overview of the routes of MSC injection in animal experiments and clinical trials