Quantitative evaluation of human bone mesenchymal stem cells rescuing fulminant hepatic failure in pigs

ObjectiveStem cell transplantation provides a promising alternative for the treatment of fulminant hepatic failure (FHF). However, it lacks fundamental understanding of stem cells’ activities. Our objective was to clarify stem cell-recipient interactions for overcoming barriers to clinical applicati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Gut 2017-05, Vol.66 (5), p.955-964
Hauptverfasser: Shi, Dongyan, Zhang, Jianing, Zhou, Qian, Xin, Jiaojiao, Jiang, Jing, Jiang, Longyan, Wu, Tianzhou, Li, Jiang, Ding, Wenchao, Li, Jun, Sun, Suwan, Li, Jianzhou, Zhou, Ning, Zhang, Liyuan, Jin, Linfeng, Hao, Shaorui, Chen, Pengcheng, Cao, Hongcui, Li, Mingding, Li, Lanjuan, Chen, Xin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ObjectiveStem cell transplantation provides a promising alternative for the treatment of fulminant hepatic failure (FHF). However, it lacks fundamental understanding of stem cells’ activities. Our objective was to clarify stem cell-recipient interactions for overcoming barriers to clinical application.DesignWe used an in-house large-animal (pig) model of FHF rescue by human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hBMSCs) and profiled the cells’ activities. The control and transplantation groups of pigs (n=15 per group) both received a D-galactosamine (D-Gal) injection (1.5 g/kg). The transplantation group received hBMSCs via intraportal vein infusion (3×106 cells/kg) immediately after D-Gal administration. The stem cell-recipient interactions were quantitatively evaluated by biochemical function, cytokine array, metabolite profiling, transcriptome sequencing and immunohistochemistry.ResultsAll pigs in the control group died within an average of 3.22 days, whereas 13/15 pigs in the transplantation group lived >14 days. The cytokine array and metabolite profiling analyses revealed that hBMSC transplantation suppressed D-Gal-induced life-threatening cytokine storms and stabilised FHF within 7 days, while human-derived hepatocytes constituted only ∼4.5% of the pig hepatocytes. The functional synergy analysis of the observed profile changes indicated that the implanted hBMSCs altered the pigs’ cytokine responses to damage through paracrine effects. Delta-like ligand 4 was validated to assist liver restoration in both pig and rat FHF models.ConclusionsOur results delineated an integrated model of the multifaceted interactions between stem cells and recipients, which may open a new avenue to the discovery of single molecule-based therapeutics that simulate stem cell actions.
ISSN:0017-5749
1468-3288
DOI:10.1136/gutjnl-2015-311146