Center for Discovery and Innovation, Hackensack Meridian Health, Nutley, NJ, United States.
Department of Chemistry and Chemistry Biology, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, NJ, United States.
Front Immunol. 2020 Feb 25;11:165. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00165. eCollection 2020.
Clinical studies demonstrated the immune modulation of cord blood-derived stem cells (CB-SC) for the treatment of type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases, with long-lasting clinical efficacy. To determine the molecular mechanisms underlying the immune modulation of CB-SC, the actions of exosomes released from CB-SC were explored in this study. Exosomes were isolated from CB-SC cultures using ultracentrifugation and confirmed with different markers. The activated T cells and purified monocytes from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were treated with CB-SC in the presence or absence of the purified exosomes, followed by functional and flow cytometry analysis of phenotypic changes with different immune cell markers. CB-SC-derived exosomes displayed the exosome-specific markers including CD9, CD63, and Alix, at the size of 85.95 ± 22.57 nm. In comparison with the treatment of CB-SC, functional analysis demonstrated that the CB-SC-derived exosomes inhibited the proliferation of activated PBMC, reduced the production of inflammatory cytokines, downregulated the percentage of activated CD4 T and CD8 T cells, and increased the percentage of naive CD4 T and CD8 T cells. Using the fluorescence dye DiO-labeled exosomes, flow cytometry revealed that exosomes preferably bound to the monocytes in the PBMC, leading to an improvement of mitochondrial membrane potential of treated monocytes. Further study indicated that the purified monocytes gave rise to spindle-like macrophages displaying type 2 macrophage (M2) surface markers and upregulating an expression of immune tolerance-related cytokines after the treatment with exosomes. CB-SC-derived exosomes display multiple immune modulations and primarily on monocytes, contributing to the immune education of CB-SC in the clinical treatment of autoimmune diseases.
临床研究表明,脐血来源的干细胞(CB-SC)可通过调节免疫来治疗 1 型糖尿病和其他自身免疫性疾病,且具有持久的临床疗效。为了确定 CB-SC 免疫调节的分子机制,本研究探索了 CB-SC 释放的外泌体的作用。采用超速离心法从 CB-SC 培养物中分离出外泌体,并使用不同的标志物进行验证。用 CB-SC 孵育来自外周血单个核细胞(PBMC)的激活 T 细胞和纯化的单核细胞,并在有无纯化的外泌体的情况下进行处理,然后用不同的免疫细胞标志物进行功能和流式细胞术分析,以评估表型变化。CB-SC 来源的外泌体显示出外泌体特有的标志物,包括 CD9、CD63 和 Alix,大小为 85.95 ± 22.57nm。与 CB-SC 处理相比,功能分析表明 CB-SC 衍生的外泌体抑制了激活的 PBMC 的增殖,减少了炎症细胞因子的产生,下调了激活的 CD4T 和 CD8T 细胞的比例,增加了幼稚 CD4T 和 CD8T 细胞的比例。使用荧光染料 DiO 标记的外泌体,流式细胞术显示外泌体优先与 PBMC 中的单核细胞结合,导致处理后的单核细胞线粒体膜电位提高。进一步的研究表明,纯化的单核细胞在经过外泌体处理后,会产生具有 2 型巨噬细胞(M2)表面标志物的梭形巨噬细胞,并上调免疫耐受相关细胞因子的表达。CB-SC 衍生的外泌体具有多种免疫调节作用,主要作用于单核细胞,有助于 CB-SC 在自身免疫性疾病的临床治疗中进行免疫教育。