Investigating bioengineering approaches to produce immuno-modulatory mesenchymal stromal cells and their extracellular vesicle

Lead Research Organisation: Aston University
Department Name: College of Health and Life Sciences

Abstract

Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are a rare population of cells found in most tissues within the body and are invaluable in the maintenance of these structures. As well as forming bone, muscle or fatty tissues, MSCs can also be immunosuppressive. They can both resolve inflammation by modulating immune cells (ImCs) and promote tissue repair through multiple mechanisms such as the release of soluble factors or lipid-bound vesicles - extracellular vesicles (EVs). Currently, MSCs are being trialed as a cell-based therapy, however, large numbers are required. EVs may reduce this cell requirement, but are themselves needed in high quantities for patient therapy, therefore expansion of MSCs is essential before transfusion of either cells or EVs. Unfortunately, MSCs spontaneously differentiate over time in laboratory culture, losing their critical naïve immunomodulatory (ImM) abilities. Moreover, the clinical demand for MSCs remains unmet as MSCs from older donors are comparatively less potent than those from younger donors. This limits the number of patients that can be currently treated with this therapy and the ability to grow functional, naïve MSCs which retain their important anti-inflammatory and tissue repair abilities remains a key goal for scientific research. Thus, there is a need to investigate new methodologies to expand MSCs in the laboratory whilst maintaining them in a naïve state for therapy.
Previous observations have revealed the potential for altering the growth conditions of MSCs which affect their metabolism yet retaining their ImM and repair properties. Changes in MSC adhesion for example, affect their energy production; a key feature of how MSCs modulate their physiology. Supplementation of small molecules to MSC cell culture can also reproduce this effect and maintain the ImM functions of these cells. These represent new approaches to culturing the large number of cells required for individual patient therapy or EV collection. How these culture methods affect MSC ImM properties or EV therapeutic anti-inflammatory potential remains to be defined. Therefore using alternative growth conditions potentially allows expansion of therapeutically relevant MSC and their EVs. The delivery of molecules from EVs to cells may have the potential to control the immune system for therapeutic benefit. While actively growing cells continuously shed EVs - and EVs contain a variety of cargos including soluble factors, DNA and other proteins - EV treatment of inflammatory conditions has been demonstrated not to be associated with toxic side effects of standard drug treatments.
This project will build upon initial findings, exploring the potential of novel culture systems to generate large scale cultures of functional cells for therapy. Combining polymer-based growth surfaces with expansion in bioreactors will be evaluated. MSCs will be expanded via a microcarrier-based bioreactor, initially on a small-scale to optimise culture conditions. This system allows the rapid growth of MSCs, increasing their numbers more quickly than traditional laboratory-based culture. Expanded MSC 'quality' will be evaluated by measuring growth, metabolism profiles, ImM function on ImCs, and the MSC EV's ability to modulate inflammation. Released soluble factors from MSCs within these culture systems will also be analysed. This approach may lead to a new diagnostic test to screen large scale cultures for therapy to provide patients with optimal, functional cells. Alongside this, MSC EVs collected from bioreactor expansion will be examined and characterised, with their effects on other ImCs evaluated.
Overall, this project will inform on new bioprocessing and diagnostic approaches to allow the upscaling of MSC cultures to generate the required numbers of cells or EVs required for therapy. This has the potential to reveal new strategies for reversing the reduced functionality of MSCs from older donors through modulating their in-vitro growth condition

Planned Impact

Humanised, 3D tissue models are finding interest due to current overly-simplified immortal cell lines and non-human in vivo models providing poor prediction of drug safety, dosing and efficacy; 43% of drug fails are not predicted by traditional screening and move into phase I clinical trials1. Phase I sees a 48% success rate, phase II a 29% success rate and phase III a 67% success rate [1]. The drug development pipeline is pressurised due to adoption of high throughput screening / combinatorial libraries. However, while R&D spend has increased to meet this growing screening programme, success, measured by launched drugs, remains static [2]. This poor predictive power of the >1 million animals used in the UK each year drives the 12-15 year, £1.85B pipeline, for each new drug launch [3]. Contract research organisations (CROs) are also similarly hit by these problems.

Drive to reduce animal experimentation in toxicology and outright banning of animal testing for e.g. cosmetics in the UK has driven companies to outsource or to adopt the limited number of regulator approved NAT models for e.g. skin [4,5].

Another key area that uses 3D tissues is the field of advanced therapeutic medicinal products (ATMPs), i.e. tissue engineering/regenerative medicine. Regulation is a major ATMP bottleneck. It is thus noteworthy that regulators, such as the UKs Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), are receptive to the inclusion of NAT-based data in investigative medicinal product dossiers [6].

The lifETIME CDT will directly address these issues through nurturing of a cohort training not only in the research skills required to conceive and design new NATs, but also in skills based on:

- GMP and manufacture.
- Commercialisation and entrepreneurship.
- Regulation.
- Drug discovery and toxicology - a focus on the end product.
- Policy.
- Public engagement.

Our NAT graduate community will impact on:

- Pharma - access to skills that develop tools to unlock their drug discovery and testing portfolios. By helping train graduates who can create and deploy NATs, they will increase efficiency of drug development pipelines.

- ATMP manufacturers - the same skills and tools used to deliver NAT innovation will help to deliver tissue engineered / combination product ATMPs.

- CROs - access to skills to create platform tools providing more sophisticated approaches to the diverse research challenges they face.

- Catapult Centres - access to skills that provide innovation that can be deployed across the broader healthcare sector.

- Regulatory agencies e.g. MHRA - better education for the next generation of scientists on development of investigational new drug / medicinal product dossiers to speedup approvals.

- Clinicians and NHS - access to more medicines more quickly through provision of highly skilled scientists, manufacturers and regulators. NATs will help drive the stratified/personalised medicine revolution and understand safety and efficacy parameters in human-relevant tissues. Clinicians will also benefit from development of ATMP-based regenerative medicine.

- Patients - benefit from skills for faster and more economically streamlined development of new medicines that will improve lifespan and healthspan.

- Public and Society - benefit from the economic growth of a thriving drug development industry. Benefits will be direct, via jobs creation and access to wider and more targeted healthcare products; and indirect, via increased economic benefit of patients returning to work and increased tax revenues, that in turn feed back into the healthcare systems.


[1]. Cook. Nat Rev Drug Discov 13, 419-431 (2014).
[2]. Pammolli. Nat Rev Drug Discov 10, 428-438 (2011).
[3]. DiMasi. Health Econ 47, 20-33 (2016).
[4]. Cotovio. Altern Lab Anim 33, 329-349 (2005).
[5]. Kandarova. Altern Lab Anim 33, 351-367 (2005).
[6]. https://goo.gl/i6xbmL

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S02347X/1 01/07/2019 31/12/2027
2608627 Studentship EP/S02347X/1 30/09/2025 30/09/2025 Jennifer Willis