Tuning pro-survival effects of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived exosomes using elastin-like polypeptides

Exosome-based regenerative therapies are potentially easier to manufacture and safer to apply compared to cell-based therapies. However, many questions remain about how to bio-manufacture reproducible and potent exosomes using animal-free reagents. Here we evaluate the hypothesis that designer bioma...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomaterials 2022-12, Vol.291, p.121864-121864, Article 121864
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Chen-Hung, Hunt, Daniel, Roth, Julien George, Chiu, Ching-Chi, Suhar, Riley A., LeSavage, Bauer L., Seymour, Alexis Jane, Lindsay, Chris, Krajina, Brad A., Chen, Yi-Tung, Chang, Kuo-Hsuan, Hsieh, I-Chang, Chu, Pao-Hsien, Wen, Ming-Shien, Heilshorn, Sarah C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Exosome-based regenerative therapies are potentially easier to manufacture and safer to apply compared to cell-based therapies. However, many questions remain about how to bio-manufacture reproducible and potent exosomes using animal-free reagents. Here we evaluate the hypothesis that designer biomaterial substrates can be used to alter the potency of exosomes secreted by human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Two animal-free designer matrices were fabricated based on recombinant elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs): one including a cell-adhesive RGD ligand and a second with a non-adhesive RDG peptide. While iPSCs cultured on these two substrates and Matrigel-coated controls had similar levels of proliferation, the RDG-ELP substrate significantly increased protein expression of stemness markers OCT4 and SOX2 and suppressed spontaneous differentiation compared to those on RGD-ELP. The pro-survival potency of iPSC-derived exosomes was evaluated using three distinct stress tests: serum starvation in murine fibroblasts, hypoxia in human endothelial cells, and hyperosmolarity in canine kidney cells. In all three cases, exosomes produced by iPSCs grown on RDG-ELP substrates had similar pro-survival effects to those produced using iPSCs grown on Matrigel, while use of RGD-ELP substrates led to significantly reduced exosome potency. These data demonstrate that recombinant substrates can be designed for the robust bio-manufacturing of iPSC-derived, pro-survival exosomes.
ISSN:0142-9612
1878-5905
DOI:10.1016/j.biomaterials.2022.121864