Thong Teck Tan, Ruenn Chai Lai, Wei Kian Sim, Bin Zhang, Sai Kiang Lim
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引用次数: 0
摘要
间充质干细胞/基质细胞(MSC)已显示出良好的治疗潜力。然而,美国食品和药物管理局(FDA)尚未批准间充质干细胞产品,主要原因是缺乏基于作用机制的可靠药效检测方法来确保疗效的一致性。目前认为间充质干细胞主要通过释放 50-200 纳米的细胞外小泡(sEVs)来发挥药效。虽然非活体间充质干细胞-sEV 药物与较大的活体间充质干细胞药物相比具有明显优势,但阐明其作用机制以开发可靠的药效测定方法仍是一项挑战。阐明间充质干细胞-sEV 作用机制的关键前奏是细胞外囊泡 (EV) 如何与主要靶细胞结合。鉴于细胞内化过程中的内吞、内逸和EV解包裹等过程固有的低效率,我们提出了另一种EV-细胞啮合方式:EMCEV(EV 对细胞的胞外调制)。这种方法涉及通过 EV 属性进行细胞外调节,以产生信号/抑制分子,这些分子有可能影响附近的许多细胞,从而引起更广泛的组织反应。
Enhancing EV-cell communication through "External Modulation of Cell by EV" (EMCEV).
Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSC) have displayed promising therapeutic potential. Nonetheless, no United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved MSC product exists due largely to the absence of a reliable potency assay based on the mechanisms of action to ensure consistent efficacy. MSCs are now thought to exert their effects primarily by releasing small extracellular vesicles (sEVs) of 50-200 nm. While non-living MSC-sEV drugs offer distinct advantages over larger, living MSC drugs, elucidating their mechanism of action to develop robust potency assays remains a challenge. A pivotal prelude to elucidating the mechanism of action for MSC-sEVs is how extracellular vesicles (EVs) engage their primary target cells. Given the inherent inefficiencies of processes such as endocytosis, endosomal escape and EV uncoating during cellular internalization, we propose an alternative EV-cell engagement: EMCEV (Extracellular Modulation of Cells by EV). This approach involves extracellular modulation by EV attributes to generate signaling/inhibitory molecules that have the potential to affect many cells within the vicinity, thereby eliciting a more widespread tissue response.
期刊介绍:
The journal brings readers the latest developments in the fast moving field of cellular therapy in man. This includes cell therapy for cancer, immune disorders, inherited diseases, tissue repair and regenerative medicine. The journal covers the science, translational development and treatment with variety of cell types including hematopoietic stem cells, immune cells (dendritic cells, NK, cells, T cells, antigen presenting cells) mesenchymal stromal cells, adipose cells, nerve, muscle, vascular and endothelial cells, and induced pluripotential stem cells. We also welcome manuscripts on subcellular derivatives such as exosomes. A specific focus is on translational research that brings cell therapy to the clinic. Cytotherapy publishes original papers, reviews, position papers editorials, commentaries and letters to the editor. We welcome "Protocols in Cytotherapy" bringing standard operating procedure for production specific cell types for clinical use within the reach of the readership.