Lung diseases are a major cause of global morbidity and mortality that are treated with limited efficacy. Recently stem cell therapies have been shown to effectively treat animal models of lung disease. However, there are limitations to the translation of these cell therapies to clinical disease. Studies have shown that delayed treatment of animal models does not improve outcomes and that the models do not reflect the repeated injury that is present in most lung diseases. We tested the efficacy of amnion mesenchymal stem cells (AM-MSC), bone marrow MSC (BM-MSC) and human amniotic epithelial cells (hAEC) in C57BL/6 mice using a repeat dose bleomycin-induced model of lung injury that better reflects the repeat injury seen in lung diseases. The dual bleomycin dose led to significantly higher levels of inflammation and fibrosis in the mouse lung compared to a single bleomycin dose. Intravenously infused stem cells were present in the lung in similar numbers at days 7 and 21 post cell injection. In addition, stem cell injection resulted in a significant decrease in inflammatory cell infiltrate and a reduction in IL-1 (AM-MSC), IL-6 (AM-MSC, BM-MSC, hAEC) and TNF-α (AM-MSC). The only trophic factor tested that increased following stem cell injection was IL-1RA (AM-MSC). IL-1RA levels may be modulated by GM-CSF produced by AM-MSC. Furthermore, only AM-MSC reduced collagen deposition and increased MMP-9 activity in the lung although there was a reduction of the pro-fibrogenic cytokine TGF-β following BM-MSC, AM-MSC and hAEC treatment. Therefore, AM-MSC may be more effective in reducing injury following delayed injection in the setting of repeated lung injury

Moodley, Y., Vaghjiani, V., Chan, J., Baltic, S., Ryan, M., Tchongue, J., Samuel, C. S., Murthi, P., Parolini, O., Manuelpillai, U., Anti-inflammatory effects of adult stem cells in sustained lung injury: a comparative study, <<PLOS ONE>>, 2013; 8 (8): 69299-69299. [doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0069299] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/92372]

Anti-inflammatory effects of adult stem cells in sustained lung injury: a comparative study

Parolini, Ornella
Penultimo
;
2013

Abstract

Lung diseases are a major cause of global morbidity and mortality that are treated with limited efficacy. Recently stem cell therapies have been shown to effectively treat animal models of lung disease. However, there are limitations to the translation of these cell therapies to clinical disease. Studies have shown that delayed treatment of animal models does not improve outcomes and that the models do not reflect the repeated injury that is present in most lung diseases. We tested the efficacy of amnion mesenchymal stem cells (AM-MSC), bone marrow MSC (BM-MSC) and human amniotic epithelial cells (hAEC) in C57BL/6 mice using a repeat dose bleomycin-induced model of lung injury that better reflects the repeat injury seen in lung diseases. The dual bleomycin dose led to significantly higher levels of inflammation and fibrosis in the mouse lung compared to a single bleomycin dose. Intravenously infused stem cells were present in the lung in similar numbers at days 7 and 21 post cell injection. In addition, stem cell injection resulted in a significant decrease in inflammatory cell infiltrate and a reduction in IL-1 (AM-MSC), IL-6 (AM-MSC, BM-MSC, hAEC) and TNF-α (AM-MSC). The only trophic factor tested that increased following stem cell injection was IL-1RA (AM-MSC). IL-1RA levels may be modulated by GM-CSF produced by AM-MSC. Furthermore, only AM-MSC reduced collagen deposition and increased MMP-9 activity in the lung although there was a reduction of the pro-fibrogenic cytokine TGF-β following BM-MSC, AM-MSC and hAEC treatment. Therefore, AM-MSC may be more effective in reducing injury following delayed injection in the setting of repeated lung injury
2013
AREA05 - SCIENZE BIOLOGICHE
Pubblicazione su rivista con Impact Factor
Inglese
Articolo in rivista
Inglese
Adult Stem Cells; Amnion; Animals; Bleomycin; Bone Marrow Cells; Collagen; Epithelial Cells; Female; Fibrosis; Humans; Inflammation; Lung Injury; Mesenchymal Stromal Cells; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Pregnancy; Receptors, Interleukin-1
Settore BIO/13 - BIOLOGIA APPLICATA
8
8
2013
69299
69299
1
Articolo su rivista scientifica / specializzata
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Moodley, Y., Vaghjiani, V., Chan, J., Baltic, S., Ryan, M., Tchongue, J., Samuel, C. S., Murthi, P., Parolini, O., Manuelpillai, U., Anti-inflammatory effects of adult stem cells in sustained lung injury: a comparative study, <<PLOS ONE>>, 2013; 8 (8): 69299-69299. [doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0069299] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/92372]
open
262
Moodley, Yuben; Vaghjiani, Vijesh; Chan, James; Baltic, Svetlana; Ryan, Marisa; Tchongue, Jorge; Samuel, Chrishan S; Murthi, Padma; Parolini, Ornella;...espandi
10
art_per_29
03. Contributo in rivista::Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
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