Bone formation by human paediatric marrow stromal cells in a functional allogeneic immune system
Date
2024-01-11Author
Fahy, Niamh
Palomares Cabeza, Virginia
H. Kiernan, Caoimhe
Lolli, Andrea
Witte-Bouma, Janneke
Fahmy Garcia, Shorouk
Merino, Ana
Kops, Nicole
Ridwan, Yanto
B. Wolvius, Eppo
A.J. Brama, Pieter
Hoogduijn, Martin
Farrell, Eric
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Allogeneic stem-cell based regenerative medicine is a promising approach for bone defect repair. The use of
chondrogenically differentiated human marrow stromal cells (MSCs) has been shown to lead to bone formation
by endochondral ossification in immunodeficient pre-clinical models. However, an insight into the interactions
between the allogeneic immune system and the human MSC-derived bone grafts has not been fully achieved yet.
The choice of a potent source of MSCs isolated from pediatric donors with consistent differentiation and high
proliferation abilities, as well as low immunogenicity, could increase the chance of success for bone allografts. In
this study, we employed an immunodeficient animal model humanised with allogeneic immune cells to study the
immune responses towards chondrogenically differentiated human pediatric MSCs (ch-pMSCs). We show that ch differentiated pMSCs remained non-immunogenic to allogeneic CD4 and CD8 T cells in an in vitro co-culture
model. After subcutaneous implantation in mice, ch-pMSC-derived grafts were able to initiate bone minerali sation in the presence of an allogeneic immune system for 3 weeks without the onset of immune responses. Re exposing the splenocytes of the humanised animals to pMSCs did not trigger further T cell proliferation, sug gesting an absence of secondary immune responses. Moreover, ch-pMSCs generated mature bone after 8 weeks of
implantation that persisted for up to 6 more weeks in the presence of an allogeneic immune system. These data
collectively show that human allogeneic chondrogenically differentiated pediatric MSCs might be a safe and
potent option for bone defect repair in the tissue engineering and regenerative medicine setting.
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