Specific Exogenous Activation of Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Maximizes their Therapeutic Potential to Modulate Inflammation
Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are adult stem cells that are attractive as a cellular therapeutic due to their many beneficial effects, such as modulating immune/inflammatory responses in many diseases and after injury. Although the safety of MSC therapy has been demonstrated in humans, most of the cells injected don’t migrate to the site of inflammation and get cleared from the body rapidly. Therefore, very large and often repeated doses are needed. Additionally, these cells need to be stimulated by external signals to impart their beneficial effects. It is not clear the degree to which this may be happening in the body, especially when only a small fraction of cells make it to the target tissue, or when the amount of stimulatory factors in the environment may be relatively low. Therefore, we hypothesize that activating and immobilizing the MSCs prior to transplantation can improve the efficacy of MSC therapies. In this study, the activation of MSCs by a panel of inflammatory molecules and the effects of these on MSC immunomodulation was investigated in a macrophage model of inflammation. Two factors were identified as optimal for activating the MSC to increase their ability to transition macrophages from a pro- to an anti-inflammatory state. This approach will also be investigated using MSCs encapsulated in alginate microspheres. The continuance of this work will result in the creation of an immobilized, activated MSC therapy that maximizes their efficacy in human patients.
Jerome Baudry
Faculty: Project Co-PI
Hello Andrea,
Do you have any controls for results of Figure 5, i.e., have you tried to see, say, what the effect of IFN-beta (or other ) to identify any synergistic effect that could maybe not be deducted from the individual effects ?
Andrea Gray
Hi Dr. Baudry,
Thank you for your question! Just to reiterate, the main factor effects are determined by comparing the average of the metric (in this case, MSC secretion of PGE2) when the factor was present in the MSC activating cocktail to that when it was not present. Two-factor (possiblly synergistic) interactions are determined by comparing the levels the metric for MSC activating cocktails where neither factor was present, only one factor was present, or both factors were present. Any trends deduced from this collection of data may be convoluted with the presence of other factors in the cocktail (i.e. the presence of IFN-b when calculating results for LPS).
To control for this and to confirm the results of the high throughput experiment, we included smaller scale experiments using activation cocktails including only one factor or specific combinations of factors of interest. For your specific question about Figure 5, an experiment was performed using monolayer MSC cultured in medium or medium with LPS, IL-1b, or LPS + IL-1b. PGE2 levels were analyzed in the supernatants. Here we observed, again an apparent synergistic effect of exposure to both factors on MSC PGE2 secretion. The trend toward increased potency of IL-1b compared to LPS was also sustained, although more pronounced in this small scale control experiment. Therefore analysis of interactions using this smaller scale approach may reveal effects that the high throughput screen is not sensitive enough to detect.
Because the goal of this high throughput screen was to identify MSC-activating factors that would induce MSC-mediated modulation of macrophages toward an M2 phenotype (i.e. simultaneous attenuation of macrophage TNF-a and promotion of IL-10), only the effects of LPS and IL-1b were further explored in these smaller scale control experiments. However, factors such as IFN-b and IFN-g did produce interesting effects that may warrant their further investigation using this smaller scale approach.
Markus Seeliger
Faculty: Project Co-PI
Hi Andrea,
this is a pretty impressive analysis. Were the MSCs encapsuled in these experiments? And if not, can you speculate what the effect of alginate encapsulation might be?
Andrea Gray
Hi Dr. Seeliger,
Thank you for your question and interest in the work! For the experiments presented here, the MSCs were in monolayer cultures, not encapsulated in alginate. The alginate-encapsulated MSCs (eMSCs) are microcapsules, about 500 um in diameter, and roll around freely in culture. Monolayer cultures were used to ease the implementation of the high throughput fractional factorial design, as these cells are adherent, which allows for easier handling of conditioned media (i.e. using a multichannel pipette).
In previous work done in our lab, we have observed that the MSC secretome is enhanced when the cells are encapsulated, constitutively and after activation with TNF-? and IFN-? [Barminko et al. (2011)]. Therefore it reasonable to expect that we may see different or enhanced modulation of macrophages by eMSC activated with IL-1? and/or LPS as compared to monolayer MSCs.
To test this, we investigated the effect of IL-1? and/or LPS activation of eMSCs on macrophage modulation, using the same conditioned media approach outlined in Schematic 2. We observed that attenuation of macrophage TNF-? secretion was comparable between monolayer MSCs and eMSCs that were unactivated or activated with LPS. For IL-1 ? activation, however, eMSCs exhibited an enhanced ability to attenuate macrophage TNF-? secretion. Future work will investigate how this difference may be connected to MSC-alginate interactions in the microcapsules.
Govindarajan Ramesh
Faculty
a) What according to you could be the possible mechanism that might have led to the activation of MSC?
Andrea Gray
Hi Dr. Ramesh,
Thank you for your question! We, too, have begun to ponder over the mechanism underlying the results of this analysis. The factors used in this panel are ligands of different cell surface receptors which activate different intracellular signaling pathways in the MSCs. These different pathways have different effects on gene expression, cellular function, and secretion. Herein lies the motivation and logic for this high throughput screen of factors: we hypothesize that the specific activation of one or more of these signaling pathways will result in changes in MSC secretion that will have specific effects on target cells (i.e. modulation of macrophage phenotype).
Interestingly, we found that factors that activate the same intracellular pathways induced similar effects on MSC immunomodulation. LPS and IL-1? activate TLR4 and IL1R, respectively. These receptors share intracellular accessory proteins that stimulate MyD-88-dependent activation of NF-kB [Lindstrom et al. 2005)]. Translocation of this transcription factor to the nucleus results in the upregulated expression of many genes, including cyclooxygenase-2, an enzyme essential in the production of PGE2. This may explain why synergistic effects were seen by simultaneous exposure of MSCs to these factors. IFN-? and IFN-? also had similar effects, seemingly activating the MSCs to upregulate both TNF-? and IL-10 from macrophages. These factors both initiate JAK/STAT signaling pathways, which induces cytokine production and anti-viral activity in immune cells [Kerr et al. (1991)]. It is well established that IFN-? is required for MSC-mediated suppression of T-cell activity [Ren et al. (2008)], but to the best of my knowledge, the effect of interferons on MSC-mediated macrophage modulation has not been explored. Therefore, future experiments will look at further elucidating the mechanisms by which these factors activate MSCs.
Kristin Hager
Partner: Outreach
Hi Andrea,
You stimulated the macrophages for 48 hours and then collect the factors. Given that paracrine signalling requires cells to be in close poximity and as you state are rapidly cleared, Do you have an idea of how much you have closed the “time” window or dose amount and if so, what do you expect to see in the animal trials?
Andrea Gray
Hi Dr. Hager,
Thank you for your very interesting question! It is true that a potential benefit of pre-activation will be to quicken the onset of response once the cells are delivered in vivo, as they will be already primed for action. As of yet, we have not begun to investigate this aspect of the work. In previous studies, however, in which we have delivered MSCs in a rat model of contusive spinal cord injury by lumbar puncture, we began to see therapeutic effects as early as 7 days after injection. Therefore, if pre-activation will ameliorate a delay in onset of action of the MSCs in vivo, we may expect to see therapeutic effects at earlier time points than 7 days after injection.
Related to this, we have begun to investigate how restrictive the window for use is after the MSCs are activated. By this I mean that we have started conducting experiments that look at the dynamics of MSC activation after the activating factor is removed. In these preliminary in vitro studies, we exposed the MSCs to LPS or IL-1b for a time, removed the activating factors, and continued to culture the cells in basal medium. We observed that initially elevated MSC secretion of IL-6 decreases over time after removal of the activator, approaching basal levels. We also observed the IL-1b was a more potent upregulator of MSC IL-6. And, despite the drop-off in secretion, IL-1b-activated MSCs still secreted more IL-6 than unactivated or LPS-activated MSCs, even 48 hours after removal of the activating factor. This suggests that the MSCs have changed in some way after pre-activation. Therefore if MSCs are injected directly after their pre-activation, they may still be in a state of elevated secretion that will allow them to start imparting beneficial effects more or less immediately. Subsequent studies will investigate whether these pre-activated MSCs are more sensitive to secondary stimuli, such as what they may encounter in vivo.
Zhaomin Yang
Faculty
Nice work! I have naive questions: What are the mediators leading from MSC to macrophages and is it possible that MSC themselves might produce TNF-alfa and IL-10?
Andrea Gray
Hi Dr. Yang,
Thanks for your question! In response to your first question, several MSC-secreted factors have been implicated in the promotion of anti-inflammatory macrophage phenotypes. These include PGE2 [Laskin et al. (2011)], which is discussed in the poster, IL1RA [Ortiz et al (2007)], TGF-b [Gong et al. (2012), and TSG6 [Hosoon et al. (2011)]. We plan to probe our MSC conditioned media for these other molecules in an effort to further understand the mechanism underlying activated MSC modulation of macrophages.
Regarding your second question, studies in literature report that MSCs do not secrete TNF-a [van den Berk et al. (2012)]. Some studies, however, have reported MSC secretion of IL-10 [Aggarwal et al. (2005) ]. When we probed our activated MSC conditioned media using ELISA, IL-10 was not detectable. Therefore, all TNF-a and IL-10 measured in the macrophage supernatants were produced by the macrophages themselves.