Project Summary
We are currently investigating the use of human mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) for tissue repair by injecting
MSCs into the damaged organ. Recent discoveries indicate that many of the therapeutic benefits of MSCs can
be attributed to secretion of various biomolecules which can be secreted via exosomes, small membrane
vesicles of endocytic origin. Most cell types secrete exosomes which contain proteins, DNA, mRNA, and
microRNA, all of which which are thought to play a role in cell-cell communication. While previous research
efforts largely focused on the characterization of proteins found in exosomes, our current research focuses on
exosomal RNAs. Increasing evidence suggests that exosome formation and release are regulated by the
autophagy pathway, a homeostatic quality control pathway that recycles proteins and organelles via recognition,
sequestration, and lysosomal degradation. Conditions that stimulate autophagy pathway can inhibit exosome
release, but at the same time pharmacological inhibitors of autophagy enhance the release of exosomes. For
our study, we propose utilizing a subtype of MSCs called “marrow-isolated adult multilineage inducible” (MIAMI)
cells due to their ease of isolation from bone marrow, differentiation capacity, their immunomodulatory and tissue
repair capacities, and ability to secrete various chemokines/growth factors.
We hypothesize that autophagy mediates release of exosomes from MIAMI cells, regulates their RNA
content and their immunomodulatory capacity.
To stimulate MIAMI cells, we will expose them to inflammatory response stimulator, IFN, while simultaneously
applying pharmacologic stimulators or inhibitors of autophagy. Subsequently, we will isolate and characterize
MIAMI cell-derived exosomes by using NanoSight, electron microscopy and immunoblotting to characterize and
compare exosomes size distributions, exosome yield and markers (CD9, CD63 and CD81) (Aim 1). We will then
determine how modulation of autophagy regulates exosomal RNA content by identifying and validating long
(more than 200 nucleotides) and short (less than 200 nucleotides) RNAs in MIAMI cells-derived exosomes (Aim
2). Lastly, we will evaluate immunoregulatory properties of MIAMI cells upon modulation of autophagy using
MIAMI cell-T cell co-cultures and subsequent flow cytometry analysis to assess T cell markers of proliferation
and cytokine secretion (Aim 3). Results of this mechanistic study will increase our understanding of the role that
autophagy plays in regulating RNA content in exosomes and it will also reveal whether targeting autophagy could
be used to manipulate RNA content and subsequently immunomodulation. Ultimately, such knowledge is
anticipated to foster further development of cell therapies for tissue regeneration.
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