4.7 Article

Serelaxin enhances the therapeutic effects of human amnion epithelial cell-derived exosomes in experimental models of lung disease

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 176, Issue 13, Pages 2195-2208

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bph.14666

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Monash Innovation Research Funding
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council [GNT1041766]
  3. Monash University MBio Postgraduate Discovery Scholarship

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Background and Purpose There is growing interest in stem cell-derived exosomes for their therapeutic and regenerative benefits given their manufacturing and regulatory advantages over cell-based therapies. As existing fibrosis impedes the viability and efficacy of stem cell/exosome-based strategies for treating chronic diseases, here we tested the effects of the anti-fibrotic drug, serelaxin, on the therapeutic efficacy of human amnion epithelial cell (AEC)-derived exosomes in experimental lung disease. Experimental Approach Female Balb/c mice were subjected to either the 9.5-week model of ovalbumin and naphthalene (OVA/NA)-induced chronic allergic airway disease (AAD) or 3-week model of bleomycin (BLM)-induced pulmonary fibrosis; then administered increasing concentrations of AEC-exosomes (5 mu g or 25 mu g), with or without serelaxin (0.5mg/kg/day) for 7-days. 1x10(6) AECs co-administered with serelaxin over the corresponding time-period were included for comparison in both models, as was pirfenidone-treatment of the BLM model. Control groups received saline/corn oil or saline, respectively. Key Results Both experimental models presented with significant tissue inflammation, remodelling, fibrosis and airway/lung dysfunction at the time-points studied. While AEC-exosome (5 mu g or 25 mu g)-administration alone demonstrated some benefits in each model, serelaxin was required for AEC-exosomes (25 mu g) to rapidly normalise chronic AAD-induced airway fibrosis and airway reactivity, and BLM-induced lung inflammation, epithelial damage and subepithelial/basement membrane fibrosis. Combining serelaxin with AEC-exosomes (25 mu g) also demonstrated broader protection compared to co-administration of serelaxin with 1x10(6) AECs or pirfenidone. Conclusions and Implications Serelaxin enhanced the therapeutic efficacy of AEC-exosomes in treating basement membrane-induced fibrosis and related airway dysfunction.

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