Stem Cell Therapy Using Bone Marrow-Derived Muse Cells Repairs Radiation-Induced Intestinal Injury Through Their Intestine-Homing via Sphingosine Monophosphate-Sphingosine Monophosphate Receptor 2 Interaction

IF 2.2 Q3 ONCOLOGY Advances in Radiation Oncology Pub Date : 2024-07-09 DOI:10.1016/j.adro.2024.101565
Taichi Miura PhD , Junko Kado MS , Hirotoshi Takiyama MD, PhD , Mitsuko Kawano PhD , Asako Yamagiri BS , Shoko Nishihara PhD , Shigeru Yamada MD, PhD , Fumiaki Nakayama MD, PhD
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Abstract

Purpose

There is still no effective treatment for the gastrointestinal side effects of radiation therapy. Multilineage-differentiating stress-enduring (Muse) cells are tissue stem cells that have the ability to spontaneously home in on injured tissues and repair them. Several clinical trials have shown that stem cell therapy using human bone marrow-derived Muse (hBM-Muse) cells is effective in treating various diseases, but it is not known whether they are effective in treating radiation-induced intestinal injury. In this study, we investigated whether hBM-Muse cells are homing to the radiation-damaged intestine and promote its repair.

Methods and Materials

hBM-Muse cells were injected into the tail vein of mice 2 hours after high-dose total body irradiation. Then, homing analysis, crypt assay, bromodeoxyuridine assay, Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate nick end labeling (TUNEL) assay, immunostaining, and survival time measurements were performed. In addition, we analyzed the expression of sphingosine monophosphate (S1P), a Muse cell-inducing factor, in the mouse small intestine after irradiation. Finally, we investigated whether the administration of JTE-013, an S1P receptor 2-specific antagonist, inhibits hBM-Muse cells homing to the injured intestine.

Results

S1P expression increased in mouse intestine after irradiation, with hBM-Muse cells homing in on the injured intestine. Injection of hBM-Muse cells after radiation exposure significantly increased the number of crypts, proliferating cells in the crypts, and small intestinal component cells such as intestinal stem cells inhibited radiation-induced apoptosis and prolonged mouse survival. Treatment with JTE-013 significantly inhibited intestinal homing and therapeutic effects of hBM-Muse cells. These findings indicate that hBM-Muse cells homed in on the injured intestine through the S1P-S1P receptor 2 interaction to exert therapeutic effects on the radiation-induced intestinal injury.

Conclusions

This study indicates that hBM-Muse cells are effective in treating radiation-induced intestinal injury, suggesting that hBM-Muse cell-based stem cell therapy has the potential to overcome gastrointestinal side effects that limit the indications for radiation therapy.

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利用骨髓来源的缪斯细胞(Muse)通过 S1P-S1PR2 相互作用使肠道归位,从而修复辐射引起的肠道损伤的干细胞疗法
目的对于放射治疗的胃肠道副作用,目前还没有有效的治疗方法。多线性分化应激耐受(Muse)细胞是一种组织干细胞,能够自发地归属于受伤组织并对其进行修复。多项临床试验表明,使用人类骨髓来源的缪斯(hBM-Muse)细胞进行干细胞治疗可有效治疗各种疾病,但它们是否能有效治疗辐射引起的肠道损伤尚不清楚。本研究探讨了 hBM-Muse 细胞是否能归巢到辐射损伤的肠道并促进其修复。然后进行归巢分析、隐窝检测、溴脱氧尿苷检测、末端脱氧核苷酸转移酶介导的脱氧尿苷三磷酸缺口标记(TUNEL)检测、免疫染色和存活时间测定。此外,我们还分析了辐照后小鼠小肠中鞘磷脂(S1P)的表达,S1P是一种Muse细胞诱导因子。最后,我们研究了注射 S1P 受体 2 特异性拮抗剂 JTE-013 是否能抑制 hBM-Muse 细胞向损伤肠道归巢。辐照后注射hBM-Muse细胞可显著增加隐窝数量、隐窝增殖细胞和小肠成分细胞(如肠干细胞),抑制辐射诱导的细胞凋亡,延长小鼠存活时间。用 JTE-013 治疗可明显抑制 hBM-Muse 细胞的肠道归巢和治疗效果。这些发现表明,hBM-Muse细胞通过S1P-S1P受体2相互作用作用于损伤肠道,对辐射诱导的肠道损伤发挥治疗作用。结论这项研究表明,hBM-Muse细胞能有效治疗辐射诱导的肠道损伤,这表明基于hBM-Muse细胞的干细胞疗法有可能克服限制放疗适应症的胃肠道副作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Advances in Radiation Oncology
Advances in Radiation Oncology Medicine-Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
4.30%
发文量
208
审稿时长
98 days
期刊介绍: The purpose of Advances is to provide information for clinicians who use radiation therapy by publishing: Clinical trial reports and reanalyses. Basic science original reports. Manuscripts examining health services research, comparative and cost effectiveness research, and systematic reviews. Case reports documenting unusual problems and solutions. High quality multi and single institutional series, as well as other novel retrospective hypothesis generating series. Timely critical reviews on important topics in radiation oncology, such as side effects. Articles reporting the natural history of disease and patterns of failure, particularly as they relate to treatment volume delineation. Articles on safety and quality in radiation therapy. Essays on clinical experience. Articles on practice transformation in radiation oncology, in particular: Aspects of health policy that may impact the future practice of radiation oncology. How information technology, such as data analytics and systems innovations, will change radiation oncology practice. Articles on imaging as they relate to radiation therapy treatment.
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