Sharma Juhi, Hampton Jeffrey M, Valiente Giancarlo R, Wada Takuma, Steigelman Holly, Young Matthew C, Spurbeck Rachel R, Blazek Alisa D, Bösh Steffi, Jarjour Wael N, Young Nicholas A
Division of Rheumatology and Immunology, Department of Internal Medicine, Wexner Medical Center at The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
The Inflammation Foundation, Orlando, FL, USA.
Front Immunol. 2017 May 10;8:526. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00526. eCollection 2017.
Since being discovered over half a century ago, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been investigated extensively to characterize their cellular and physiological influences. MSCs have been shown to possess immunosuppressive capacity through inhibiting lymphocyte activation/proliferation and proinflammatory cytokine secretion while simultaneously demonstrating limited allogenic reactivity, which subsequently led to the evaluation of therapeutic feasibility to treat inflammatory diseases. Although regulatory constraints have restricted MSC development pharmacologically, limited clinical studies have shown encouraging results using MSC infusions to treat systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE); but, more trials will have to be performed to conclusively determine the clinical efficacy of MSCs to treat SLE. Moreover, there are some data to suggest that MSCs possess tumorigenic potential and that the immunosuppressive influence can be dramatically affected by both donor variability and expansion. Given that recent studies have found that the immunosuppressive effects of MSCs are a result, at least in part, to extracellular vesicle (EV) secretion, the use of MSC-derived EVs has been suggested as a cell-free therapeutic alternative. Despite the positive data observed using EVs isolated from human MSCs to suppress inflammatory responses and in inhibiting autoimmune disease pathogenesis in preclinical work, there are no studies to date examining EVs from MSCs to treat SLE in humans or animal models. Considering that EVs are not subject to the strict regulatory constraints of stem cell-based pharmacological development and are more readily standardized with regard to industrial-scale production and storage, this review outlines the anti-inflammatory biology of MSCs and the scientific evidence supporting the potential use of EVs derived from human MSCs to treat patients with SLE.
自半个多世纪前被发现以来,间充质干细胞(MSCs)已被广泛研究以表征其细胞和生理影响。MSCs已被证明具有免疫抑制能力,可通过抑制淋巴细胞活化/增殖和促炎细胞因子分泌,同时表现出有限的同种异体反应性,这随后促使人们评估其治疗炎症性疾病的可行性。尽管监管限制在药理学上限制了MSCs的发展,但有限的临床研究表明,使用MSCs输注治疗系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)取得了令人鼓舞的结果;但是,还需要进行更多试验才能最终确定MSCs治疗SLE的临床疗效。此外,有一些数据表明MSCs具有致瘤潜力,并且免疫抑制作用会受到供体变异性和扩增的显著影响。鉴于最近的研究发现MSCs的免疫抑制作用至少部分是细胞外囊泡(EV)分泌的结果,因此有人建议使用源自MSCs的EV作为无细胞治疗替代方案。尽管在临床前研究中观察到使用从人MSCs分离的EV抑制炎症反应和抑制自身免疫性疾病发病机制的积极数据,但迄今为止尚无研究在人类或动物模型中研究源自MSCs的EV治疗SLE。考虑到EV不受基于干细胞的药理学开发的严格监管限制,并且在工业规模生产和储存方面更容易标准化,本综述概述了MSCs的抗炎生物学以及支持使用源自人MSCs的EV治疗SLE患者的科学证据。