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Human endoderm stem cells reverse inflammation-related acute liver failure through cystatin SN-mediated inhibition of interferon signaling

Authors :
Yilin Xu
Jinglin Wang
Haozhen Ren
Hao Dai
Ying Zhou
Xiongzhao Ren
Yang Wang
Sisi Feng
Xiaogang Deng
Jiaying Wu
Tianlong Fu
Tengfei Nie
Haifeng He
Tongkun Wei
Bing Zhu
Lijian Hui
Bin Li
Jing Wang
Hongyan Wang
Luonan Chen
Xiaolei Shi
Xin Cheng
Source :
Cell Research. 33:147-164
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Acute liver failure (ALF) is a life-threatening disease that occurs secondary to drug toxicity, infection or a devastating immune response. Orthotopic liver transplantation is an effective treatment but limited by the shortage of donor organs, the requirement for life-long immune suppression and surgical challenges. Stem cell transplantation is a promising alternative therapy for fulminant liver failure owing to the immunomodulatory abilities of stem cells. Here, we report that when transplanted into the liver, human endoderm stem cells (hEnSCs) that are germ layer-specific and nontumorigenic cells derived from pluripotent stem cells are able to effectively ameliorate hepatic injury in multiple rodent and swine drug-induced ALF models. We demonstrate that hEnSCs tune the local immune microenvironment by skewing macrophages/Kupffer cells towards an anti-inflammatory state and by reducing the infiltrating monocytes/macrophages and inflammatory T helper cells. Single-cell transcriptomic analyses of infiltrating and resident monocytes/macrophages isolated from animal livers revealed dramatic changes, including changes in gene expression that correlated with the change of activation states, and dynamic population heterogeneity among these cells after hEnSC transplantation. We further demonstrate that hEnSCs modulate the activation state of macrophages/Kupffer cells via cystatin SN (CST1)-mediated inhibition of interferon signaling and therefore highlight CST1 as a candidate therapeutic agent for diseases that involve over-activation of interferons. We propose that hEnSC transplantation represents a novel and powerful cell therapeutic treatment for ALF.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cell Biology
Molecular Biology

Details

ISSN :
17487838
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c852b7b7182d08a7ed6fa574443af1fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41422-022-00760-5