Abstract

Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) have strong immunomodulatory properties and therefore can be used to control inflammation and tissue damage. It was suggested recently that MSC injections can be used to treat multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (TB). However, MSC trafficking and immunomodulatory effects of MSC injections during Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection have not been studied. To address this issue we have analyzed MSC distribution in tissues and local immunological effects of MSC injections in Mtb infected and uninfected mice. After intravenous injection, MSC accumulated preferentially in the lungs where they were located as cell aggregates in the alveolar walls. Immunological analysis of MSC effects included detection of activated, IFN-γ and IL-4 producing CD4+ lymphocytes, the frequency analysis of dendritic cells (CD11c+F4/80) and macrophages (CD11c-F4/80+) located in the lungs, the expression of IA/IE and CD11b molecules by these cells, and evaluation of 23 cytokines/chemokines in lung lysates. In the lungs of uninfected mice, MSC transfer markedly increased the percentage of IFN-γ+ CD4+ lymphocytes and dendritic cells, elevated levels of IA/IE expression by dendritic cells and macrophages, augmented local production of type 2 cytokines (IL-4, IL-5, IL-10) and chemokines (CCL2, CCL3, CCL4, CCL5, CXCL1), and downregulated type 1 and hematopoietic cytokines (IL-12p70, IFN-γ, IL-3, IL-6, GM-CSF). Compared to uninfected mice, Mtb infected mice had statistically higher “background” frequency of activated CD69+ and IFN-γ+ CD4+ lymphocytes and dendritic cells, and higher levels of cytokines in the lungs. The injections of MSC to Mtb infected mice did not show statistically significant effects on CD4+ lymphocytes, dendritic cells and macrophages, only slightly shifted cytokine profile, and did not change pathogen load or slow down TB progression. Lung section analysis showed that in Mtb infected mice, MSC could not be found in the proximity of the inflammatory foci. Thus, in healthy recipients, MSC administration dramatically changed T-cell function and cytokine/chemokine milieu in the lungs, most likely, due to capillary blockade. But, during Mtb infection, i.e., in the highly-inflammatory conditions, MSC did not affect T-cell function and the level of inflammation. The findings emphasize the importance of the evaluation of MSC effects locally at the site of their predominant post-injection localization and question MSC usefulness as anti-TB treatment.

Highlights

  • Mesenchymal Stromal cells (MSC) are widely considered as therapeutic cell population capable to dampen undesired immune activation in the course of autoimmunity or tissue regeneration

  • We focused on local MSC effects in the lungs, a predominant site of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection and MSC accumulation following their systemic administration

  • Our results show that MSC can exert significant immunomodulatory effects in uninflamed lungs and have only limited capacity to modulate local immune responses during Mtb infection

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Summary

Introduction

Mesenchymal Stromal cells (MSC) are widely considered as therapeutic cell population capable to dampen undesired immune activation in the course of autoimmunity or tissue regeneration. Recent studies have demonstrated that MSC possess rather immunoregulatory than immunosuppressive properties, and may inhibit, sustain or stimulate effector cell functions depending on the microenvironment [1, 2, 4]. Under steady-state and Th2-biased conditions, MSC are less suppressive and may support various effector immune cells [17]. The microenvironment fine-tunes MSC function, and the cells may exert different effects in various tissues and pathological conditions [18]. A significant part of data documenting MSC suppressive activity were obtained in vitro or under a restricted set of pathological conditions (mainly in animal models of autoimmune diseases and organ transplantation)

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