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Mesenchymal Stromal Cells: an Antimicrobial and Host-Directed Therapy for Complex Infectious Diseases

Timothy D. Shaw, Anna D. Krasnodembskaya, Gunnar N. Schroeder, Alimuddin Zumla, Markus Maeurer, Cecilia M. O’Kane

2021Clinical Microbiology Reviews34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

studies have reported on the use of human MSCs for the treatment of infectious diseases, with many more studies of animal MSCs in same-species models of infection. MSCs demonstrate potent antimicrobial effects against the major classes of human pathogens (bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites) across a wide range of infection models. Mechanistic studies have yielded important insight into their immunomodulatory and bactericidal activity, which can be enhanced through various forms of preconditioning. MSCs are being investigated in over 80 clinical trials for difficult-to-treat infectious diseases, including sepsis and pulmonary, intra-abdominal, cutaneous, and viral infections. Completed trials consistently report MSCs to be safe and well tolerated, with signals of efficacy against some infectious diseases. Although significant obstacles must be overcome to produce a standardized, affordable, clinical-grade cell therapy, these studies suggest that MSCs may have particular potential as an adjunct therapy in complex or resistant infections.

Topics & Concepts

Mesenchymal stem cellAntimicrobialSepsisImmunologyImmune systemMedicineInnate immune systemCell therapyClinical trialBiologyAcquired immune systemIn vivoInfectious disease (medical specialty)Stromal cellImmunityImmunotherapyCellBacteremiaIn vitroAntimicrobial peptidesVirologyAnimal modelMicrobiologyInflammationMesenchymal stem cell researchCancer Cells and MetastasisTissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
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