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Human Mesenchymal Stem Cell Secretome Driven T Cell Immunomodulation Is IL-10 Dependent

The Human Mesenchymal Stem Cell (hMSC) secretome has pleiotropic effects underpinning its therapeutic potential. hMSC serum-free conditioned media (SFCM) contains a variety of cytokines, with previous studies linking a changed secretome composition to physoxia. The Jurkat T cell model allowed the ef...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shephard, Matthew T., Merkhan, Marwan M., Forsyth, Nicholas R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9658100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36362383
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232113596
Descripción
Sumario:The Human Mesenchymal Stem Cell (hMSC) secretome has pleiotropic effects underpinning its therapeutic potential. hMSC serum-free conditioned media (SFCM) contains a variety of cytokines, with previous studies linking a changed secretome composition to physoxia. The Jurkat T cell model allowed the efficacy of SFCM vs. serum-free media (SFM) in the suppression of immunological aspects, including proliferation and polarisation, to be explored. Cell growth in SFM was higher [(21% O(2) = 5.3 × 10(5) ± 1.8 × 10(4) cells/mL) and (2% O(2) = 5.1 × 10(5) ± 3.0 × 10(4) cells/mL)], compared to SFCM [(21% O(2) = 2.4 × 10(5) ± 2.5 × 10(4) cells/mL) and (2% O(2) = 2.2 × 10(5) ± 5.8 × 10(3) cells/mL)]. SFM supported IL-2 release following activation [(21% O(2) = 5305 ± 211 pg/mL) and (2% O(2) = 5347 ± 327 pg/mL)] whereas SFCM suppressed IL-2 secretion [(21% O(2) = 2461 ± 178 pg/mL) and (2% O(2) = 1625 ± 159 pg/mL)]. Anti-inflammatory cytokines, namely IL-4, IL-10, and IL-13, which we previously confirmed as components of hMSC SFCM, were tested. IL-10 neutralisation in SFCM restored proliferation in both oxygen environments (SFM/SFCM(+antiIL−10) ~1-fold increase). Conversely, IL-4/IL-13 neutralisation showed no proliferation restoration [(SFM/SFM(+antiIL−4) ~2-fold decrease), and (SFM/SFCM(+antiIL−13) ~2-fold decrease)]. Present findings indicate IL-10 played an immunosuppressive role by reducing IL-2 secretion. Identification of immunosuppressive components of the hMSC secretome and a mechanistic understanding of their action allow for the advancement and refinement of potential future cell-free therapies.