Differentiation Of Monocytes Into Phenotypically Distinct Macrophages After Treatment With Human Cord Blood Stem Cell (Cb-Sc)-Derived Exosomes

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS(2020)

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摘要
Stem Cell Educator (SCE) therapy is a novel clinical approach for the treatment of type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune diseases. SCE therapy circulates the isolated patient's blood mononuclear cells (e.g., lymphocytes and monocytes) through an apheresis machine, co-cultures the patient's blood mononuclear cells with adherent cord blood-derived stem cells (CB-SC) in the SCE device, and then returns these "educated" immune cells to the patient's blood. Exosomes are nano-sized extracellular vesicles between 30-150 nm existing in all biofluid and cell culture media. To further explore molecular mechanisms underlying SCE therapy and determine the actions of exosomes released from CB-SC, we investigate which cells phagocytize these exosomes during the treatment with CB-SC. By co-culturing Dio-labeled CB-SC-derived exosomes with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), we found that CB-SC-derived exosomes were predominantly taken up by human CD14-positive monocytes, leading to the differentiation of monocytes into type 2 macrophages (M2), with spindle-like morphology and expression of M2-associated surface molecular markers. Here, we present a protocol for the isolation and characterization of CB-SC-derived exosomes and the protocol for the co-culture of CB-SC-derived exosomes with human monocytes and the monitoring of M2 differentiation.
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