Harting Matthew T, Jimenez Fernando, Xue Hasan, Fischer Uwe M, Baumgartner James, Dash Pramod K, Cox Charles S
Departments of Pediatric Surgery, University of Texas Medical School at Houston, Texas, USA.
J Neurosurg. 2009 Jun;110(6):1189-97. doi: 10.3171/2008.9.JNS08158.
Cell therapy has shown preclinical promise in the treatment of many diseases, and its application is being translated to the clinical arena. Intravenous mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) therapy has been shown to improve functional recovery after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Herein, the authors report on their attempts to reproduce such observations, including detailed characterizations of the MSC population, non-bromodeoxyuridine-based cell labeling, macroscopic and microscopic cell tracking, quantification of cells traversing the pulmonary microvasculature, and well-validated measurement of motor and cognitive function recovery.
Rat MSCs were isolated, expanded in vitro, immunophenotyped, and labeled. Four million MSCs were intravenously infused into Sprague-Dawley rats 24 hours after receiving a moderate, unilateral controlled cortical impact TBI. Infrared macroscopic cell tracking was used to identify cell distribution. Immunohistochemical analysis of brain and lung tissues 48 hours and 2 weeks postinfusion revealed transplanted cells in these locations, and these cells were quantified. Intraarterial blood sampling and flow cytometry were used to quantify the number of transplanted cells reaching the arterial circulation. Motor and cognitive behavioral testing was performed to evaluate functional recovery.
At 48 hours post-MSC infusion, the majority of cells were localized to the lungs. Between 1.5 and 3.7% of the infused cells were estimated to traverse the lungs and reach the arterial circulation, 0.295% reached the carotid artery, and a very small percentage reached the cerebral parenchyma (0.0005%) and remained there. Almost no cells were identified in the brain tissue at 2 weeks postinfusion. No motor or cognitive functional improvements in recovery were identified.
The intravenous infusion of MSCs appeared neither to result in significant acute or prolonged cerebral engraftment of cells nor to modify the recovery of motor or cognitive function. Less than 4% of the infused cells were likely to traverse the pulmonary microvasculature and reach the arterial circulation, a phenomenon termed the "pulmonary first-pass effect," which may limit the efficacy of this therapeutic approach. The data in this study contradict the findings of previous reports and highlight the potential shortcomings of acute, single-dose, intravenous MSC therapy for TBI.
细胞疗法在多种疾病的治疗中已展现出临床前的应用前景,并且其应用正在向临床领域转化。静脉注射间充质干细胞(MSC)疗法已被证明可改善创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后的功能恢复。在此,作者报告了他们重现此类观察结果的尝试,包括对MSC群体的详细表征、基于非溴脱氧尿苷的细胞标记、宏观和微观细胞追踪、穿过肺微血管的细胞定量,以及对运动和认知功能恢复的有效测量。
分离大鼠MSC,在体外进行扩增、免疫表型分析并标记。在接受中度单侧控制性皮质撞击性TBI 24小时后,将400万个MSC静脉注射到Sprague-Dawley大鼠体内。使用红外宏观细胞追踪来确定细胞分布。在输注后48小时和2周对脑和肺组织进行免疫组织化学分析,揭示这些部位存在移植细胞,并对这些细胞进行定量。通过动脉内采血和流式细胞术来定量到达动脉循环的移植细胞数量。进行运动和认知行为测试以评估功能恢复情况。
在MSC输注后48小时,大多数细胞定位于肺部。估计有1.5%至3.7%的输注细胞穿过肺部并到达动脉循环,0.295%到达颈动脉,仅有极小比例的细胞到达脑实质(0.0005%)并留在那里。在输注后2周,几乎未在脑组织中发现细胞。未发现恢复过程中运动或认知功能有改善。
静脉输注MSC似乎既未导致细胞在脑内显著急性或长期植入,也未改变运动或认知功能的恢复。不到4%的输注细胞可能穿过肺微血管并到达动脉循环,这一现象被称为“肺首过效应”,这可能会限制这种治疗方法的疗效。本研究的数据与先前报告的结果相矛盾,并突出了急性单剂量静脉注射MSC治疗TBI的潜在缺点。