AI Article Synopsis

  • Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have low immunogenicity and immunomodulatory abilities, suggesting safe transplantation in immunocompetent recipients without immunosuppression.
  • In an experiment with baboons, three groups received either no treatment, MSCs from the same donor, or MSCs from different donors, with muscle biopsies showing MSC persistence in 50% of animals after treatment.
  • The study found that while recipient baboons developed alloantibodies against donor cells, their overall T-cell response remained unaffected, indicating that repeated high doses of allogeneic MSCs can modulate immune responses, potentially enhancing MSC survival.

Article Abstract

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) express low immunogenicity and demonstrate immunomodulatory properties in vitro that may safely allow their transplantation into unrelated immunocompetent recipients without the use of pharmacologic immunosuppression. To test this hypothesis, three groups of baboons (three animals per group) were injected as follows: group 1 animals were injected with vehicle; group 2 animals were injected IV with DiI-labeled MSCs (5 x 106 MSCs/kg body weight) followed 6 weeks later by IM injections of DiO-labeled MSCs (5 x 10(6) MSCs/kg) from the same donor; and group 3 animals were treated similarly as group 2 except that MSCs were derived from two different donors. Muscle biopsies, performed 4 weeks after the second injection of MSCs, showed persistence of DiO-labeled MSCs in 50% of the recipients. Blood was drawn at intervals for evaluation of basic immune parameters (Con A mitogen responsiveness, PBMC phenotyping, immunoglobulin levels), and to determine T-cell and alloantibody responses to donor alloantigens. Host T-cell responses to donor alloantigens were decreased in the majority of recipients without suppressing the overall T-cell response to Con A, or affecting basic parameters of the immune system. All recipient baboons produced alloantibodies that reacted with donor PBMCs. Two of six animals produced alloantibodies that reacted with MSCs. We conclude that multiple administrations of high doses of allogeneic MSCs affected alloreactive immune responses without compromising the overall immune system of recipient baboons. The induction of host T-cell hyporesponsiveness to donor alloantigens may facilitate MSC survival.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3727/000000006783981503DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

group animals
12
donor alloantigens
12
mesenchymal stem
8
stem cells
8
mscs
8
animals injected
8
mscs 106
8
106 mscs/kg
8
dio-labeled mscs
8
responses donor
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!