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

使用骨髓来源的 Muse 细胞进行干细胞治疗,通过鞘氨醇单磷酸酯-鞘氨醇单磷酸酯受体 2 相互作用进行肠归巢,修复放射诱导的肠道损伤

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作者:Taichi Miura, Junko Kado, Hirotoshi Takiyama, Mitsuko Kawano, Asako Yamagiri, Shoko Nishihara, Shigeru Yamada, Fumiaki Nakayama

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.

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.

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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