Cell Death Discovery (Sep 2023)

Antler stem cell exosomes alleviate pulmonary fibrosis via inhibiting recruitment of monocyte macrophage, rather than polarization of M2 macrophages in mice

  • Guokun Zhang,
  • Liyan Shi,
  • Jiping Li,
  • Shengnan Wang,
  • Jing Ren,
  • Dongxu Wang,
  • Pengfei Hu,
  • Yimin Wang,
  • Chunyi Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41420-023-01659-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Pulmonary fibrosis (PF), a chronic interstitial lung disease, is characterized by over-abundant deposition of extracellular matrix consisting mainly of collagen I. In previous studies, we demonstrated that deer antler stem cells (AnSCs), a novel type of adult stem cell, are capable of significantly down-regulating collagen formation in different organs and tissues and speculated that they could effectively treat PF via reducing collagen deposition in the lung tissue. In the present study, we found that administration of AnSCs improved the survival rate of PF mice and reduced lung fibrosis, collagen deposition and myofibroblast differentiation. The effects of AnSC treatment were significantly better than the positive control (adipose-derived stem cells). Interestingly, AnSC-Exos were almost equally effective as AnSCs in treating PF, suggesting that the effects of AnSCs on reduction of PF may be mainly through a paracrine mechanism. Further, AnSC-Exos reduced the number of M2 macrophages, a type of macrophage that secrets pro-fibrotic factors to accelerate fibrotic progression, in the lung tissues. In vitro experiments showed that the effects of AnSC-Exos on macrophage modulation were likely achieved via inhibition of the recruitment of circulating monocyte-derived macrophages (reducing the number of macrophages), rather than via inhibition of M2 polarization of macrophages. Inhibition of macrophage recruitment by AnSCs may be achieved indirectly via inhibiting CCL7 expression in fibroblasts; both let-7b and let-7a were highly enriched in AnSC-Exos and may play a critical role in the inhibition of CCL7 expression of fibroblasts. Collectively, the use of antler stem cells or their exosomes opens up a novel strategy for PF treatment in the clinical setting.