AdventHealth launches first-of-its-kind immunotherapy treatment, clinical trial for specific blood cancer patients – The Daily Ridge

AdventHealth launches first-of-its-kind immunotherapy treatment, clinical trial for specific blood cancer patients

The innovative treatment being tested, which uses donated immune cells, offers a potential last chance of survival after conventional treatments have failed.

ORLANDO, Fla.,May 27, 2020 AdventHealth physicians are the first in the world to launch a pioneering treatment targeting certain blood cancers for patients who have exhausted all other types of therapy.Antigen-Specific T-Cell therapy, which is the subject of a clinical trial at AdventHealth Orlando, uses the immune cells to target cancer cells, and provides what is often the final treatment opportunity for people suffering from certain types of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and myelodysplastic syndromes(MDS).The first patient to receive this therapy was treated in late April at AdventHealth Orlando and is recovering at home. He will be monitored to determine the efficacy of the treatment, which may take several months.More than 19,000 people will be diagnosed with AML this year in the United States, and over 11,000 people will die from the disease, according to the National Cancer Institute. The five-year survival rate for AML is 28.7 percent, while in comparison, the five-year survival rate for leukemia is 63.7 percent.The number of people diagnosed with MDS in the country each year is uncertain, but is estimated at 10,000 or higher, the American Cancer Society reports.The best attribute of an immunotherapy treatment like this one is that its a precise, customizable and personalized way to treat cancer for those who have no options left, said Dr. Juan Carlos Varela, hematology oncologist at AdventHealth and principal investigator of the trial. The relapse after traditional forms of treatment for these patients is around 40 percent. That relapse is the No. 1 cause of death for this patient population. Their options are very limited and theres an urgent need for potentially lifesaving treatment options like this one.Antigen-Specific T-Cells are made by removing white blood cells from a donor (who had previously donated stem cells to the patient), generating immune cells that are tumor-specific, and then infusing the generated cells back into the patients bloodstream. Antigen-Specific T-Cells are able to attack specific cancer cells.Being the first in the world to launch this therapy, and to have the lead investigator on our team, shows our commitment to personalized medicine, which is the future of cancer care, said Dr. Mark A. Socinski, executive medical director of the AdventHealth Cancer Institute. Were excited to bring this innovative therapy to our patients and allow them to access this potentially lifesaving treatment close to home.The Antigen-Specific T-Cell Therapy clinical trial and the Blood and Marrow Transplant program are made possible by the generous support of community donors, including the AdventHealth Foundation of Central Florida.

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AdventHealth launches first-of-its-kind immunotherapy treatment, clinical trial for specific blood cancer patients - The Daily Ridge

Gamida looks to build out cell therapy infrastructure – Bioprocess Insider – BioProcess Insider

Gamida Cell will initiate a BLA submission for lead cell therapy omidubicel later this year and grow inhouse manufacturing capabilities to support production of cancer candidate GDA-201.

Israeli cell therapy company Gamida Cell raised $60 million (55 million) last week through a public share offering. The money will be used to support the approval application and manufacturing capabilities of its cell therapy products, the firm said on an investor call last week.

Lead candidate omidubicel formerly known as NiCord is a hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), or bone marrow transplant, which recently met its primary endpoint in a Phase III study.

Image: iStock/Pablo_K

We have focused on working towards initiating a BLA submission on a rolling basis in the fourth quarter of this year, which will position us for a potential launch in the second half of 2021, Gamida CEO Julian Adams said on the call. We are also advancing key activities to bring omidubicel to patients following potential FDA approval.

The firm has been using Lonza to produce clinical material of omidubicel, with the contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) constructing dedicated suites at its site in Geleen, The Netherlands to support the candidates progression towards commercialization last year, but Adams said Gamida is also expanding its own production capabilities.

Work is ongoing to build out our manufacturing infrastructure both as Lonza and at our own facility to help ensure sufficient and reliable commercial supply. We are also working to develop comprehensive hospital services and patient assistance programs designed to seamlessly bring omidubicel to patients.

Gamida is also actively recruiting for medical affairs talent and reps to support a launch, now the financing has closed. It was dependent on the successful financing, so that we would have the wherewithal to continue to build out all of the infrastructure both for medical affairs, commercial and manufacturing.

Gamidas second candidate is GDA-201, an investigational, natural killer (NK) cell-based cancer immunotherapy in Phase I development in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL) and multiple myeloma.

Its based on the platform that brought us the omidubicel program and a lot of experience knowledge and relationships that weve made are ones that were leveraging for development of GDA-201, Gamidas chief medical officer Ronit Simantov told stakeholders. We continue to develop that program with development of cryopreserved products in our laboratories, and we will intend to bring that to a clinical study of company sponsored multi-center studies for patients next year.

But while Gamida will rely somewhat on Lonza for omidubicel, for GDA-201 the firm wants to manufacture fully inhouse.

We are undertaking to manufacture the NK GDA-201 product in our own facilities, said Adams, and the key advantage now that weve learned how to cryopreserve and recover NK activity is to turn that into a GMP process. So, theres still some process development going on, but were quite confident that we will achieve [this].

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Gamida looks to build out cell therapy infrastructure - Bioprocess Insider - BioProcess Insider

Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy Market to Register Substantial Expansion by Fact.MR – The Cloud Tribune

The global Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market study presents an all in all compilation of the historical, current and future outlook of the market as well as the factors responsible for such a growth. With SWOT analysis, the business study highlights the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats of each Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market player in a comprehensive way. Further, the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market report emphasizes the adoption pattern of the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy across various industries.Request Sample Reporthttps://www.factmr.com/connectus/sample?flag=S&rep_id=1001The Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market report highlights the following players:The global market for rheumatoid arthritis stem cell therapy is highly fragmented. Examples of some of the key players operating in the global rheumatoid arthritis stem cell therapy market include Mesoblast Ltd., Roslin Cells, Regeneus Ltd, ReNeuron Group plc, International Stem Cell Corporation, TiGenix and others.

The Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market report examines the operating pattern of each player new product launches, partnerships, and acquisitions has been examined in detail.Important regions covered in the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market report include:

North America (U.S., Canada)Latin America (Mexico, Brazil)Western Europe (Germany, Italy, U.K., Spain, France, Nordic countries, BENELUX)Eastern Europe (Russia, Poland, Rest Of Eastern Europe)Asia Pacific Excluding Japan (China, India, Australia & New Zealand)JapanMiddle East and Africa (GCC, S. Africa, Rest Of MEA)

The Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market report takes into consideration the following segments by treatment type:

Allogeneic Mesenchymal stem cellsBone marrow TransplantAdipose Tissue Stem Cells

The Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market report contain the following distribution channel:

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Which regulatory authorities have granted approval to the application of Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy in Health industry?How will the global Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market grow over the forecast period?Which end use industry is set to become the leading consumer of Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy by 2028?What manufacturing techniques are involved in the production of the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy?Which regions are the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market players targeting to channelize their production portfolio?Get Full Access of the Report @https://www.factmr.com/report/1001/rheumatoid-arthritis-stem-cell-therapy-market

Pertinent aspects this study on the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market tries to answer exhaustively are:

What is the forecast size (revenue/volumes) of the most lucrative regional market? What is the share of the dominant product/technology segment in the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market? What regions are likely to witness sizable investments in research and development funding? What are Covid 19 implication on Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market and learn how businesses can respond, manage and mitigate the risks? Which countries will be the next destination for industry leaders in order to tap new revenue streams? Which new regulations might cause disruption in industry sentiments in near future? Which is the share of the dominant end user? Which region is expected to rise at the most dominant growth rate? Which technologies will have massive impact of new avenues in the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market? Which key end-use industry trends are expected to shape the growth prospects of the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market? What factors will promote new entrants in the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market? What is the degree of fragmentation in the Rheumatoid Arthritis Stem Cell Therapy market, and will it increase in coming years?Why Choose Fact.MR?

Fact.MR follows a multi- disciplinary approach to extract information about various industries. Our analysts perform thorough primary and secondary research to gather data associated with the market. With modern industrial and digitalization tools, we provide avant-garde business ideas to our clients. We address clients living in across parts of the world with our 24/7 service availability.

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On the Origins of Modern Biology and the Fantastic: Part 19 Nalo Hopkinson and Stem Cell Research – tor.com

She just wanted to be somewhere safe, somewhere familiar, where people looked and spoke like her and she could stand to eat the food. Midnight Robber by Nalo Hopkinson

Midnight Robber (2000) is about a woman, divided. Raised on the high-tech utopian planet of Touissant, Tan-Tan grows up on a planet populated by the descendants of a Caribbean diaspora, where all labor is performed by an all-seeing AI. But when she is exiled to Touissants parallel universe twin planet, the no-tech New Half-Way Tree, with her sexually abusive father, she becomes divided between good and evil Tan-Tans. To make herself and New Half-Way Tree whole, she adopts the persona of the legendary Robber Queen and becomes a legend herself. It is a wondrous blend of science fictional tropes and Caribbean mythology written in a Caribbean vernacular which vividly recalls the history of slavery and imperialism that shaped Touissant and its people, published at a time when diverse voices and perspectives within science fiction were blossoming.

Science fiction has long been dominated by white, Western perspectives. Vernes tech-forward adventures and Wells sociological allegories established two distinctive styles, but still centered on white imperialism and class struggle. Subsequent futures depicted in Verne-like pulp and Golden Age stories, where lone white heroes conquered evil powers or alien planets, mirrored colonialist history and the subjugation of non-white races. The civil rights era saw the incorporation of more Wellsian sociological concerns, and an increase in the number of non-white faces in the future, but they were often tokensparts of a dominant white monoculture. Important figures that presaged modern diversity included Star Treks Lieutenant Uhura, played by Nichelle Nichols. Nichols was the first black woman to play a non-servant character on TV; though her glorified secretary role frustrated Nichols, her presence was a political act, showing there was space for black people in the future.

Another key figure was the musician and poet Sun Ra, who laid the aesthetic foundation for what would become known as the Afrofuturist movement (the term coined by Mark Dery in a 1994 essay), which showed pride in black history and imagined the future through a black cultural lens. Within science fiction, the foundational work of Samuel Delany and Octavia Butler painted realistic futures in which the histories and cultural differences of people of color had a place. Finally, an important modern figure in the decentralization of the dominant Western perspective is Nalo Hopkinson.

A similarly long-standing paradigm lies at the heart of biology, extending back to Darwins theoretical and Mendels practical frameworks for the evolution of genetic traits via natural selection. Our natures werent determined by experience, as Lamarck posited, but by genes. Therefore, genes determine our reproductive fitness, and if we can understand genes, we might take our futures into our own hands to better treat disease and ease human suffering. This theory was tragically over-applied, even by Darwin, who in Descent of Man (1871) conflated culture with biology, assuming the Wests conquest of indigenous cultures meant white people were genetically superior. After the Nazis committed genocide in the name of an all-white future, ideas and practices based in eugenics declined, as biological understanding of genes matured. The Central Dogma of the 60s maintained the idea of a mechanistic meaning of life, as advances in genetic engineering and the age of genomics enabled our greatest understanding yet of how genes and disease work. The last major barrier between us and our transhumanist future therefore involved understanding how genes determine cellular identity, and as well see, key figures in answering that question are stem cells.

***

Hopkinson was born December 20, 1960 in Kingston, Jamaica. Her mother was a library technician and her father wrote, taught, and acted. Growing up, Hopkinson was immersed in the Caribbean literary scene, fed on a steady diet of theater, dance, readings, and visual arts exhibitions. She loved to readfrom folklore, to classical literature, to Kurt Vonnegutand loved science fiction, from Spock and Uhura on Star Trek, to Le Guin, James Tiptree Jr., and Delany. Despite being surrounded by a vibrant writing community, it didnt occur to her to become a writer herself. What they were writing was poetry and mimetic fiction, Hopkinson said, whereas I was reading science fiction and fantasy. It wasnt until I was 16 and stumbled upon an anthology of stories written at the Clarion Science Fiction Workshop that I realized there were places where you could be taught how to write fiction. Growing up, her family moved often, from Jamaica to Guyana to Trinidad and back, but in 1977, they moved to Toronto to get treatment for her fathers chronic kidney disease, and Hopkinson suddenly became a minority, thousands of miles from home.

Development can be described as an orderly alienation. In mammals, zygotes divide and subsets of cells become functionally specialized into, say, neurons or liver cells. Following the discovery of DNA as the genetic material in the 1950s, a question arose: did dividing cells retain all genes from the zygote, or were genes lost as it specialized? British embryologist John Gurdon addressed this question in a series of experiments in the 60s using frogs. Gurdon transplanted nuclei from varyingly differentiated cells into oocytes stripped of their genetic material to see if a new frog was made. He found the more differentiated a cell was, the lower the chance of success, but the successes confirmed that no genetic material was lost. Meanwhile, Canadian biologists Ernest McCulloch and James Till were transplanting bone marrow to treat irradiated mice when they noticed it caused lumps in the mices spleens, and the number of lumps correlated with the cellular dosage. Their lab subsequently demonstrated that each lump was a clonal colony from a single donor cell, and a subset of those cells was self-renewing and could form further colonies of any blood cell type. They had discovered hematopoietic stem cells. In 1981 the first embryonic stem cells (ESCs) from mice were successfully propagated in culture by British biologist Martin Evans, winning him the Nobel Prize in 2007. This breakthrough allowed biologists to alter genes in ESCs, then use Gurdons technique to create transgenic mice with that alteration in every cellcreating the first animal models of disease.

In 1982, one year after Evans discovery, Hopkinson graduated with honors from York University. She worked in the arts, as a library clerk, government culture research officer, and grants officer for the Toronto Arts Council, but wouldnt begin publishing her own fiction until she was 34. [I had been] politicized by feminist and Caribbean literature into valuing writing that spoke of particular cultural experiences of living under colonialism/patriarchy, and also of writing in ones own vernacular speech, Hopkinson said. In other words, I had models for strong fiction, and I knew intimately the body of work to which I would be responding. Then I discovered that Delany was a black man, which opened up a space for me in SF/F that I hadnt known I needed. She sought out more science fiction by black authors and found Butler, Charles Saunders, and Steven Barnes. Then the famous feminist science fiction author and editor Judy Merril offered an evening course in writing science fiction through a Toronto college, Hopkinson said. The course never ran, but it prompted me to write my first adult attempt at a science fiction story. Judy met once with the handful of us she would have accepted into the course and showed us how to run our own writing workshop without her. Hopkinsons dream of attending Clarion came true in 1995, with Delany as an instructor. Her early short stories channeled her love of myth and folklore, and her first book, written in Caribbean dialect, married Caribbean myth to the science fictional trappings of black market organ harvesting. Brown Girl in the Ring (1998) follows a young single mother as shes torn between her ancestral culture and modern life in a post-economic collapse Toronto. It won the Aspect and Locus Awards for Best First Novel, and Hopkinson was awarded the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer.

In 1996, Dolly the Sheep was created using Gurdons technique to determine if mammalian cells also could revert to more a more primitive, pluripotent state. Widespread animal cloning attempts soon followed, (something Hopkinson used as a science fictional element in Brown Girl) but it was inefficient, and often produced abnormal animals. Ideas of human cloning captured the public imagination as stem cell research exploded onto the scene. One ready source for human ESC (hESC) materials was from embryos which would otherwise be destroyed following in vitro fertilization (IVF) but the U.S. passed the Dickey-Wicker Amendment prohibited federal funding of research that destroyed such embryos. Nevertheless, in 1998 Wisconsin researcher James Thomson, using private funding, successfully isolated and cultured hESCs. Soon after, researchers around the world figured out how to nudge cells down different lineages, with ideas that transplant rejection and genetic disease would soon become things of the past, sliding neatly into the hole that the failure of genetic engineering techniques had left behind. But another blow to the stem cell research community came in 2001, when President Bushs stem cell ban limited research in the U.S. to nineteen existing cell lines.

In the late 1990s, another piece of technology capturing the public imagination was the internet, which promised to bring the world together in unprecedented ways. One such way was through private listservs, the kind used by writer and academic Alondra Nelson to create a space for students and artists to explore Afrofuturist ideas about technology, space, freedom, culture and art with science fiction at the center. It was wonderful, Hopkinson said. It gave me a place to talk and debate with like-minded people about the conjunction of blackness and science fiction without being shouted down by white men or having to teach Racism 101. Connections create communities, which in turn create movements, and in 1999, Delanys essay, Racism and Science Fiction, prompted a call for more meaningful discussions around race in the SF community. In response, Hopkinson became a co-founder of the Carl Brandon society, which works to increase awareness and representation of people of color in the community.

Hopkinsons second novel, Robber, was a breakthrough success and was nominated for Hugo, Nebula, and Tiptree Awards. She would also release Skin Folk (2001), a collection of stories in which mythical figures of West African and Afro-Caribbean culture walk among us, which would win the World Fantasy Award and was selected as one ofThe New York Times Best Books of the Year. Hopkinson also obtained masters degree in fiction writing (which helped alleviate U.S. border hassles when traveling for speaking engagements) during which she wrote The Salt Roads (2003). I knew it would take a level of research, focus and concentration I was struggling to maintain, Hopkinson said. I figured it would help to have a mentor to coach me through it. That turned out to be James Morrow, and he did so admirably. Roads is a masterful work of slipstream literary fantasy that follows the lives of women scattered through time, bound together by the salt uniting all black life. It was nominated for a Nebula and won the Gaylactic Spectrum Award. Hopkinson also edited anthologies centering around different cultures and perspectives, including Whispers from the Cotton Tree Root: Caribbean Fabulist Fiction (2000), Mojo: Conjure Stories (2003), and So Long, Been Dreaming: Postcolonial Science Fiction & Fantasy (2004). She also came out with the award-winning novelThe New Moons Arms in 2007, in which a peri-menopausal woman in a fictional Caribbean town is confronted by her past and the changes she must make to keep her family in her life.

While the stem cell ban hamstrung hESC work, Gurdons research facilitated yet another scientific breakthrough. Researchers began untangling how gene expression changed as stem cells differentiated, and in 2006, Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University reported the successful creation of mouse stem cells from differentiated cells. Using a list of 24 pluripotency-associated genes, Yamanaka systematically tested different gene combinations on terminally differentiated cells. He found four genesthereafter known as Yamanaka factorsthat could turn them into induced-pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), and he and Gurdon would share a 2012 Nobel prize. In 2009, President Obama lifted restrictions on hESC research, and the first clinical trial involving products made using stem cells happened that year. The first human trials using hESCs to treat spinal injuries happened in 2014, and the first iPSC clinical trials for blindness began this past December.

Hopkinson, too, encountered complications and delays at points in her career. For years, Hopkinson suffered escalating symptoms from fibromyalgia, a chronic disease that runs in her family, which interfered with her writing, causing Hopkinson and her partner to struggle with poverty and homelessness. But in 2011, Hopkinson applied to become a professor of Creative Writing at the University of California, Riverside. It seemed in many ways tailor-made for me, Hopkinson said. They specifically wanted a science fiction writer (unheard of in North American Creative Writing departments); they wanted someone with expertise working with a diverse range of people; they were willing to hire someone without a PhD, if their publications were sufficient; they were offering the security of tenure. She got the job, and thanks to a steady paycheck and the benefits of the mild California climate, she got back to writing. Her YA novel, The Chaos (2012), coming-of-age novelSister Mine (2013), and another short story collection, Falling in Love with Hominids (2015) soon followed. Her recent work includes House of Whispers (2018-present), a series in DC Comics Sandman Universe, the final collected volume of which is due out this June. Hopkinson also received an honorary doctorate in 2016 from Anglia Ruskin University in the U.K., and was Guest of Honor at 2017 Worldcon, a year in which women and people of color dominated the historically white, male ballot.

While the Yamanaka factors meant that iPSCs became a standard lab technique, iPSCs are not identical to hESCs. Fascinatingly, two of these factors act together to maintain the silencing of large swaths of DNA. Back in the 1980s, researchers discovered that some regions of DNA are modified by small methyl groups, which can be passed down through cell division. Different cell types have different DNA methylation patterns, and their distribution is far from random; they accumulate in the promoter regions just upstream of genes where their on/off switches are, and the greater the number of methyl groups, the lesser the genes expression. Furthermore, epigenetic modifications, like methylation, can be laid down by our environments (via diet, or stress) which can also be passed down through generations. Even some diseases, like fibromyalgia, have recently been implicated as such an epigenetic disease. Turns out that the long-standing biological paradigm that rejected Lamarck also missed the bigger picture: Nature is, in fact, intimately informed by nurture and environment.

In the past 150 years, we have seen ideas of community grow and expand as the world became more connected, so that they now encompass the globe. The histories of science fiction and biology are full of stories of pioneers opening new doorsbe they doors of greater representation or greater understanding, or bothand others following. If evolution has taught us anything, its that nature abhors a monoculture, and the universe tends towards diversification; healthy communities are ones which understand that we are not apart from the world, but of it, and that diversity of types, be they cells or perspectives, is a strength.

Kelly Lagor is a scientist by day and a science fiction writer by night. Her work has appeared at Tor.com and other places, and you can find her tweeting about all kinds of nonsense @klagor

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On the Origins of Modern Biology and the Fantastic: Part 19 Nalo Hopkinson and Stem Cell Research - tor.com

Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market Growth Analysis by Size, Top Companies, Supply Demand, Trends, Demand, Overview and Forecast to 2026 – Cole of…

New Jersey, United States, The Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market report examines the market situation and prospects and represents the size of the Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market (value and volume) and the share by company, type, application and region. The general trends and opportunities of Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment are also taken into account when examining the Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment industry. Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment The market report focuses on the following section: Analysis of the Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment industry by transfer into different segments; the main types of products that fall within the scope of the report.

This Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market report is a complete analysis of the Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market based on an in-depth primary and secondary analysis. The scope of the Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market report includes global and regional sales, product consumption in terms of volume and value. The Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market report contains an estimate of revenue, CAGR and total revenue. The knowledge gathered in world trade Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment is presented in figures, tables, pie charts and graphics.

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Top 10 Companies in the Global Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market Research Report:

Global Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Drivers and Restrains

The research report included analysis of various factors that increase market growth. These are trends, restrictions and drivers that change the market positively or negatively. This section also contains information on various segments and applications that may affect the market in the future. Detailed information is based on current trends and historical milestones. This section also includes an analysis of sales volume on the Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market and for each type from 2015 to 2026. This section mentions sales volume by region from 2015 to 2026. The price analysis is included in the report Type of year 2015 to 2026, manufacturer from 2015 to 2020, region from 2015 to 2020 and total price from 2015 to 2026.

An in-depth assessment of the restrictions contained in the report describes the contrast to the drivers and leaves room for strategic planning. The factors that overshadow the growth of the market are essential as they can be understood to design different phrases to take advantage of the lucrative opportunities that the growing Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market offers. In addition, information on the opinions of market experts was used to better understand the market.

Global Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Segment Analysis

The research report contains certain segments such as application and product type. Each type provides revenue information for the 2015-2026 forecast period. The application segment also provides volume revenue and revenue for the 2015-2026 forecast period. Understanding the segments identifies the importance of the various factors that support Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market growth.

Global Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Regional Analysis

The research report includes a detailed study of the regions of North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa. The Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment report was compiled after various factors determining regional growth, such as the economic, environmental, social, technological and political status of the region concerned, were observed and examined. Analysts examined sales, sales, and manufacturer data for each region. This section analyzes sales and volume by region for the forecast period from 2015 to 2026. These analyzes help the reader understand the potential value of investments in a particular region.

Global Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market: Competitive Landscape

This section of the report lists various major manufacturers in the market. It helps the reader understand the strategies and collaborations that players focus on to fight competition in the market. The full report provides a significant microscopic overview of the Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment market. Readers can identify manufacturers footprints by knowing manufacturers global earnings, manufacturers world market prices, and manufacturers sales for the 2015-2019 forecast period.

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Table of Content

1 Introduction of Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market

1.1 Overview of the Market1.2 Scope of Report1.3 Assumptions

2 Executive Summary

3 Research Methodology of Verified Market Research

3.1 Data Mining3.2 Validation3.3 Primary Interviews3.4 List of Data Sources

4 Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market Outlook

4.1 Overview4.2 Market Dynamics4.2.1 Drivers4.2.2 Restraints4.2.3 Opportunities4.3 Porters Five Force Model4.4 Value Chain Analysis

5 Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market, By Deployment Model

5.1 Overview

6 Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market, By Solution

6.1 Overview

7 Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market, By Vertical

7.1 Overview

8 Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market, By Geography

8.1 Overview8.2 North America8.2.1 U.S.8.2.2 Canada8.2.3 Mexico8.3 Europe8.3.1 Germany8.3.2 U.K.8.3.3 France8.3.4 Rest of Europe8.4 Asia Pacific8.4.1 China8.4.2 Japan8.4.3 India8.4.4 Rest of Asia Pacific8.5 Rest of the World8.5.1 Latin America8.5.2 Middle East

9 Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market Competitive Landscape

9.1 Overview9.2 Company Market Ranking9.3 Key Development Strategies

10 Company Profiles

10.1.1 Overview10.1.2 Financial Performance10.1.3 Product Outlook10.1.4 Key Developments

11 Appendix

11.1 Related Research

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Stem Cell Alopecia Treatment Market Growth Analysis by Size, Top Companies, Supply Demand, Trends, Demand, Overview and Forecast to 2026 - Cole of...

Monocyte-derived multipotent cell delivered programmed therapeutics to reverse idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis – Science Advances

INTRODUCTION

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a rapidly progressive and fatal interstitial pulmonary disease with a dismal median survival time of just 3 years after diagnosis (1, 2). To date, the IPF therapies depend on blocking myofibroblast activation to inhibit collagen I deposition (3, 4). However, the clinical data showed that these therapies remained far from achieving IPF revision. The main reason is that the IPF therapeutics lack an effectively targeted carrier or ignore some of the other risk factors such as the instability and tolerability of type II alveolar epithelial cell (AEC II) (5, 6). The AEC II, which is considered as injured AEC II (7, 8) in the IPF tissues, releases excessive amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that initiate an antifibrinolytic coagulation cascade and promote the overexpression of connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) to provoke myofibroblast overactivation and extracellular matrix (ECM) development and then destroy the lung architecture (911). This situation has inspired us to propose that the combination of modulating superoxide in injured AEC II and antimyofibroblast activation as weeding and uprooting strategy will be a potential therapeutic strategy for synergistic antifibrosis. Furthermore, another limitation is that current therapies are rarely distributed in the lungs, which cannot achieve full therapeutic effect for treating IPF (12). Thus, the development of an effective lung-targeting drug delivery carrier is highly desirable for IPF therapy.

Recently, local preferred therapeutic agents generated using endogenous cells have served as a strong and promising delivery platform for targeting in situ, achieving considerable progress in several diseases (1317). In the inflammatory phase of IPF, precursor circulating monocytes (PCMs) have been found to undergo notable proliferation (18). PCMs and injured AEC II release chemotactic factors that specifically recruit chemokine receptorpositive (CR+) cells including monocyte-derived multipotent cell (MOMC) and guide the MOMC to migrate to injured lung tissues through specific binding to chemokine receptors on cell membrane (19, 20). Furthermore, in addition to this migration characteristic, these MOMCs, which originate from hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow, still have multipotency to differentiate into a variety of functional cells, including AEC II and endothelial cell (21, 22), which demonstrates that MOMC has the potential to participate in reestablishing lung functions (23). In addition, chronic hypoxic exposure induces the recruitment of MOMC to the pulmonary circulation, and the cell contributes to improving lung functions by producing angiogenic factors (24). It has been reported that monocytes from patients with IPF also show preconditioned prorepair features (25). In general, MOMC as a precise lung-targeting delivery platform will exhibit encouraging therapeutic effects, leading to the repair or regeneration of injured AEC II for IPF treatment.

In this study, we constructed the programmed therapeutics composed of surface-engineered nanoparticles (PER NPs) loading dual drugs adhered to MOMC (named MOMC/PER) to solve the issues in IPF therapy by improving drug accumulation in injured lung sites and completely destroying the fibrotic signaling network in IPF (Fig. 1). The MOMC/PER delivery platform realized efficacy through programmed modules, which consisted of a homing moiety, responsive release moiety, and retargeting moiety. (i) The homing moiety is the native ability of MOMC/PER to migrate to injured lungs due to the homing characteristic of MOMC. (ii) The responsive release moiety of MOMC/PER is activated by matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) overexpression in IPF tissues, resulting in pathology-responsive release of PER NPs with exposed cyclic RGDfc (Arg-Gly-Asp) [c(RGDfc)] from the MOMC. (iii) The retargeting moiety is that exposed c(RGDfc) on PER NPs can anchor to injured AEC II via an interaction between v6 and c(RGDfc) (26), allowing the cytoplasm of the injured AEC II internalize PER NPs. Subsequently, astaxanthin (AST) and trametinib (TRA) are released from PER NPs to achieve a weeding and uprooting therapeutic effect. In general, the sustained injury of epithelial cells and highly heterogeneous myofibroblasts is considered as the most critical variable in achieving complete IPF reversion (27). To validate the above hypothesis, in this study, AST was chosen as an antioxidant by neutralizing superoxide to repair injured AEC II (28), and TRA suppressed the activation of myofibroblast by inhibiting CTGF production for IPF therapy (29). MOMC also participates in treating IPF by repairing injured AEC II to promote regeneration of IPF lungs (21). Overall, MOMC/PER, which mimics the features of chimeric antigen receptor T cell immunotherapy, is a precise lung-targeting platform to reverse IPF by improving drug accumulation due to the outstanding homing ability of MOMC to injured lung sites, and the destruction of the fibrotic signaling network by inhibiting the activation of myofibroblast and repairing injured AEC II to promote the damaged lungs regeneration.

(A) Bioconjugated MOMC/PER was prepared by incubating PER NPs with MOMC. (B) MOMC/PER has multifunctional moieties including a homing moiety, responsive release moiety, and retargeting moiety to reverse IPF. Then, a weeding and uprooting strategy contributes to IPF reversion. (C) Schematic illustration of MOMC/PER for improved drugs accumulation and antifibrotic effect in IPF lung microenvironment.

The quantities of MOMC in serum and lung tissues were significantly increased in IPF mice compared with normal mice (Fig. 2A). The proliferation of MOMC was positively related to IPF progression, which might be because increasing numbers of MOMC would be recruited from the bone marrow to the lesion sites when IPF occurred (30). Motivated by the fact that MOMC has a homing ability, we considered MOMC to be a potential delivery carrier to improve delivery efficiency in IPF treatment under pathological conditions.

(A) The proliferation of Nanog+ cells in serum and lung tissues by ELISA assay. (B) The MOMC phenotypes. The level of TGF- (C) and hydroxyproline (D) in IPF lung tissues, respectively. (E) The level of TGF-/Smad in vitro. (F) Schematic showing the preparation of MOMC/PER. (G) Schematic showing the adhesion of PER NPs to MOMC. (H) SEM images of MOMC and MOMC/PER-DiI. (I) Fluorescent signals of MOMC and PER-DiI NPs by CLSM. (J) The adhesion between MOMC and PER-DiI NPs by flow cytometry. (K) In vitro migration model. The migration ability of MOMC and MOMC/PER in CXCL 12 (L) and CCL 19 (M), respectively. (N) Schematic showing sensitive release of MOMC/PER-DiI triggered by MMP-2. (O) Characterizations by TEM. MOMC is the triangle, and PER-DiI NPs are the arrows. (P) Fluorescent images of MOMC and released PER-DiI NPs by CLSM. (Q) The flow cytometry showed responsive release. (R) Schematic showing the retarget ability of released PER NPs. (S) Characterization of retargeting ability by TEM. (T) The fluorescent images by CLSM. (U) Cellular uptake in A549 by flow cytometry (n = 3). Statistical significance was calculated via one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA).

We first isolated MOMC from the peripheral blood of C57BL/6J male mice of IPF. The morphologies of the MOMC were fusiform (fig. S1). To identify the phenotypes of MOMC isolated from IPF mice, we first investigated the presence of specific markers for MOMC by immunofluorescence staining. The results showed that MOMC expressed CD11b and smooth muscle actin (-SMA) (Fig. 2B), which was consistent with the literature (24). In addition, the MOMC also expressed the stem cell markers CD14 and Nanog protein and the injured AEC IIs marker pro-surfactant protein C (SPC), as shown in Fig. 2B. These results indicated that MOMC was pluripotent cells with stem cell and epithelial celllike properties. It has been reported that MOMC was recruited to damaged lung areas and participated in recovering injured lung normalization through growth factor release to repair injured AEC II (30). In addition, to inspect the potential risk of injecting MOMC into mice, we further investigated the feasibility of using isolated MOMC as a delivery carrier, including measuring the levels of transforming growth factor (TGF-) and hydroxyproline, which are closely related to the development of IPF in vivo. The results displayed approximately onefold reduction in TGF- and hydroxyproline levels in IPF mice treated with MOMC compared with untreated bleomycin (BLM)induced mice, and these indexes were barely changed in normal mice, indicating that MOMC would not induce the occurrence of IPF and partly relieved established IPF (Fig. 2, C and D).

We next prepared PER NPs that contained two target peptides named peptide E5 and c(RGDfc). The poly(lactide-co-glycolide)-block-poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether maleimide (PLGA-PEG-Mal) and PLGA-PEG-c(RGDfc) (mass ratio, 10:1) were self-assembled by noncovalent interactions of amphiphilic PLGA-PEG copolymer into nanoparticles (31), and then, peptide E5 was bound on the NPs by the Michael reaction (fig. S2A). As determined by 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (fig. S2B) and SDSpolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (fig. S2C), we successfully prepared PER NPs, and the grafting rate of peptide E5 in the PER NPs was 43.7%. The PER NPs showed particle sizes of approximately 110 10.39 nm and the zeta potential of 23.37 mV (fig. S2, D and E). In addition, AST and TRA were encapsulated into PER NPs (fig. S2F). The drug loading content of the PER NPs was 1.98 weight % (wt %) for AST and 2.83 wt % for TRA. The sustained release of the loaded AST was 49.5 wt %, and the pH-dependent release of the loaded TRA (weak alkalinity) was 79.6 wt %, which were obtained at pH 5.0 within 72 hours (fig. S2G). Then, we investigated the capacity of MOMC to differentiate into myofibroblast after treatment with PER NPs in vitro. As shown in Fig. 2E, the expression of TGF-/small mother against decapentaplegic (TGF-/Smad), which is molecule in the crucial pathway for myofibroblast activation, was decreased, suggesting that the PER NPs could inhibit MOMC differentiation. The possible reason for the inhibition was that the PER NPs partly covered the TGF- receptor on the MOMC and reduced exogenous TGF- stimulation within 8 hours, and then, the PER NPs could be gradually internalized. The released drugs could reduce TGF- expression of MOMC after 8 hours (fig. S3, A and B).

We next constructed MOMC/PER as a delivery platform/therapeutic carrier (Fig. 2F), and PER NPs loaded with both drugs could specifically adhere to MOMC through the interaction between peptide E5 of the PER NPs and the CXCR4 on the MOMC by a temperature-dependent manner (32, 33). The formation of MOMC/PER was positively correlated with the incubation time within 2 hours (fig. S3, A and B). Moreover, the PER NPs could specifically stick to the surface of the MOMC without internalization by the MOMC within 8 hours (Fig. 2G). The reasons may be that peptide E5 conjugated on the surface of the PER NPs is a long-chain peptide that limits internalization into the MOMC and that CXCR4 is not an endocytic receptor (34). The MOMC/PER had a loading capacity of 4.75 g of TRA and 1.5 g of AST/1 105 cells (fig. S3, C and D). In addition, MOMC cell viability was above 80% with different concentrations of PER NPs and different incubation times (fig. S4, A and B).

To investigate the adhesion of MOMC and PER NPs, the 1,1-dioctadecyl-3,3,3,3-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (DiI) was loaded into blank PER NPs (PER-DiI NPs) to evaluate adhesion behavior. After incubating with MOMC and PER-DiI NPs for 2 hours, the morphologies of the MOMC/PER-DiI were confirmed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (Fig. 2H) and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) (Fig. 2I). Flow cytometry detection also indicated the formation of MOMC/PER-DiI in that the MOMC labeling green and PER-DiI NPs were collected in the double-positive quadrant (Fig. 2J).

Sequentially, migration via the interaction between a receptor and ligand is the vital characteristic that needs to be retained by MOMC/PER to realize efficient delivery (Fig. 2K). The migratory capability of MOMC/PER was detected by a Transwell invasion assay. The results indicated that the migratory ability of the MOMC/PER was unaffected by PER NPs adhering to the surface of MOMC (Fig. 2, L and M) at all studied concentrations (fig. S4, C and D).

To establish the retargeting ability of PER NPs, MMP-2 overexpressed in IPF tissues was used as an activating trigger to release PER NPs from MOMC/PER. As depicted in Fig. 2N, the separation of PER-DiI NPs from MOMC was well evidenced by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and CLSM (Fig. 2, O and P) and flow cytometry (Fig. 2Q). We also detected the phenomenon by SDS-PAGE and particle sizes changes (fig. S4, E and F). After PER NPs were released from MOMC/PER, the exposed peptide c(RGDfc) of the PR NPs could retarget v6, which is overexpressed on the surface of injured AEC II (Fig. 2R) (35). Then, we investigated the capacity of injured AEC II to uptake PLGA-PEG-c(RGDfc)coumarin 6 (PR-C6) compared with free C6 and PLGA-PEGC6 (PP-C6) by TEM and CLSM. The internalization of PR-C6 was better than other forms (C6 and PP-C6) (Fig. 2, S to U). In addition, PR-C6 also underwent lysosomal escape (fig. S4G).

The homing ability of MOMC/PER was investigated in IPF models in vivo (Fig. 3A). We first examined the lung accumulation of 1,1-dioctadecyl-3,3,3,3-tetramethylindotricarbocyanine iodide (DiR)loaded into blank PER NPs (PER-DiR NPs) adhere to MOMC (MOMC/PER-DiR) after intravenous administration. The DiR fluorescence accumulated in the lungs of the MOMC/PER-DiR group, which indicated that compared with MOMC-loading DiR (MOMC-DiR) and free-DiR, MOMC/PER-DiR had a superior ability to target IPF lungs (Fig. 3B). Then, we quantitatively analyzed the drug distribution in the tissues of each organ. The DiR fluorescence intensity in the lungs was 3.5- and 0.5-fold greater than that in the liver in the MOMC/PER-DiR and MOMC-DiR groups, respectively. In addition, there was little accumulation of free DiR in the lungs than that in the liver (Fig. 3C). MOMC loading of DiR could improve DiR accumulation in IPF lungs due to the homing ability of the MOMC.However, the accumulation of MOMC-DiR was weaker than that of MOMC/PER-DiR. This may be because the free dye carried by the MOMC was limited compared with that carried by the PER NPs, which suggested that MOMC/PER could solve the limitation of conventional drug loading of cells. In addition, we further evaluated the homing capacity of MOMC/PER, the responsive release ability of MOMC/PER mediated by MMP-2, the released PER NPs with exposed c(RGDfc), and the retargeting to injured AEC II by immunofluorescence staining. The DiI was chose to a tracer agent, labeling the PER-DiI NPs with red fluorescence, and then, the PER-DiI NPs adhered to MOMC to form MOMC/PER-DiI. Nanog and SPC, which represented MOMC and injured AEC II, respectively, were labeled in green fluorescence. Then, the MOMC/PER-DiI was administered to IPF mice by intravenous injection. As shown in Fig. 3D, the PER-DiI NPs labeled in red overlapped with the MOMC marked in green, generating a merged yellow signal, which revealed that the MOMC/PER-DiI notably accumulated in the lungs of IPF mice in stage 1 (homing to lungs). In stage 2 (releasing PER-DiI NPs), the PER-DiI NPs labeled in red were separated from the MOMC labeled in green, indicating that the PER-DiI NPs were released from the MOMC membrane surface and exposed c(RGDfc) at fibrotic foci as a result of the overexpression of MMP-2 in the IPF microenvironment. Then, the PER-DiI NPs labeled in red overlapped with injured AEC IISPC+ labeled in green, implying that the PER-DiI NPs retargeted to injured AEC II through the interaction between the exposed c(RGDfc) ligand and the v6 receptor on the surface of the injured AEC II in stage 3 (retarget injured AEC II) (Fig. 3D). Collectively, these results showed that MOMC/PER-DiI had the native ability to home to damaged lungs and then were activated by programmed procedures, confirming that MOMC could function as a vehicle to deliver PER NPs to injured lungs.

(A) Schematic of the targeting performance of MOMC/PER in the blood circulation to IPF lungs. (B) In vivo fluorescence images of IPF mice intravenous injection with MOMC-DiR, MOMC/PER-DiR, and DiR (n = 3). (C) Quantification of the in vivo retention profile (n = 3). (D) The different stages of MOMC/PER-DiI. (E) The whole lungs were imaged and investigated after 28 days. Lung morphologies (i) [Photo credit (i): Xin Chang, China Pharmaceutical University], H&E staining (ii), and Masson staining (iii). The morphologies of mitochondria by TEM (iv). The levels of TGF- (F), IL-1 (G), and IL-4 (H) by ELISA assay (n = 5). The levels of lymphocytes (I), white blood cells (J), and neutrophils (K) in whole blood (n = 5). The levels of GSH (L) and SOD (M), respectively (n = 5). (N) The expression of SPC. (O) Survival rate curves (n = 10). Statistical significance was calculated via one-way ANOVA.

To confirm the curative effect of MOMC/PER, we investigated lung morphologies after the administration of MOMC/PER or other treatments. As showed in Fig. 3E, MOMC/PER could greatly relieve IPF according to hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and Masson staining. Images of lung morphologies showed obvious normalization after treatment with MOMC or MOMC/PER compared with no treatment (Fig. 3E, i). H&E staining showed that lung tissues in the MOMC/PER group were not destroyed and that the alveolar sizes were same as normal lung tissues (Fig. 3E, ii). In addition, compared with no treatment, MOMC also partly protected the lung architecture; however, there was a gap between the MOMC/PER and normal groups. Similarly, Masson staining also showed that the MOMC/PER group exhibited an excellent reduction in collagen I deposition (Fig. 3E, iii). IPF is also induced by mitochondrial oxidative stress in injured AEC II. Hence, we examined the capability of MOMC/PER to repair injured AEC II by maintaining mitochondrial morphologies (Fig. 3E, iv). The morphologies of mitochondria were close to normal in the MOMC/PER group compared with the MOMC group and BLM group, suggesting that MOMC/PER could repair injured AEC II to maintain normal lungs by improving mitochondrial function. Furthermore, we tested the expression of proinflammatory cytokines [TGF-, interleukin-1 (IL-1), and IL-4], which play major roles in excessive ECM formation during IPF progression. As shown in Fig. 3 (F to H), the expression of TGF- in the MOMC/PER treatment group was nearly threefold lower than that in the BLM group, and the expression of IL-1 and IL-4 also decreased by nearly 0.5- and 1-fold, respectively, in the MOMC/PER group compared with the BLM group, suggesting that MOMC/PER could block IPF progression by inhibiting the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines. In addition, the formulations of MOMC and MOMC/PER showed well biocompatibility in a hemolysis test (fig. S5). In addition, inflammatory cells were quantified in whole blood in these groups after treatment. Compared with the BLM group, the MOMC/PER group showed inhibited inflammatory cell proliferation (Fig. 3, I to K), which indicated that MOMC/PER had the ability to alleviate IPF progression in the inflammatory phase. In addition, the results implied that MOMC had a certain ability to inhibit the proliferation of inflammatory cells. Next, glutathione (GSH) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), which are significant inhibitors of ROS, were used to balance the ROS content of injured AEC II. Compared with no treatment, treatment with MOMC/PER increased the GSH level nearly onefold (Fig. 3L), and MOMC also enhanced the GSH level. Similarly, MOMC/PER increased the SOD level to a certain extent in lung tissues (Fig. 3M). We further explored the repair mechanism for injured AEC II in IPF lungs treated with MOMC or MOMC/PER. The expression of SPC was markedly increased in the MOMC/PER group compared with the BLM group; there was also an augmentation in the expression of SPC in the MOMC group, which showed that MOMC/PER could up-regulate AEC II proliferation or recover injured AEC II to normalize the lungs in IPF and demonstrated that MOMC/PER could promote IPF lungs regeneration (Fig. 3N). The survival time of the MOMC/PER group exceeded 60 days, which was longer than the survival time of the BLM group (Fig. 3O), and the MOMC/PER group did not exhibit any changes in body weight (fig. S6).

To investigate the targeting ability of PER NPs through reprogramming to form MOMC/PER in the blood circulation, we conducted the following experiments. The E5-mediated targeting ability of PER-DiI NPs was first evaluated in IPF mice (Fig. 4A). CLSM showed the adhesion of PER-DiI NPs to the surface of MOMC (Fig. 4B, bottom). The confocal images produced the same result as Fig. 2I. Furthermore, PER-DiI NPs were administered to IPF mice model by intravenous injection. The results demonstrated that the PER-DiI NPs adhered to the surface of MOMC (Fig. 4B, middle). More detailed results revealed that the PER-DiI NPs could bind to the MOMC surface and reprogram the MOMC to form MOMC/PER in the peripheral blood by SEM (Fig. 4B, top). In addition, immunofluorescence staining confirmed that the PER-DiI NPs homed to IPF lungs and accumulated in the injured AEC II area after intravenous injection (Fig. 4C). In addition, Nanog-labeled MOMC (green fluorescence) accumulated in higher numbers in IPF lungs than normal lungs, which was similar to previous results (Fig. 2I). We also investigated the targeting capacity of PER-DiR NPs at different time points by in vivo imaging system following intravenous injection, and PLGA-PEG-DiR (PP-DiR NPs), PLGA-PEG-c(RGDfc)DiR (PR-DiR NPs), and PLGA-PEG-E5-DiR (PE-DiR NPs) were used as controls. The PP-DiR NPs and PR-DiR NPs were mainly found in the liver, while the PER-DiR NPs and PE-DiR NPs mainly accumulated in IPF lungs (Fig. 4D and fig. S7A). The accumulation of the PER-DiR NPs in the lungs peaked at 8 hours, while the lung accumulation of the PE-DiR NPs quickly decreased. The primary reason may be that the PE NPs were delivered to the lungs via MOMC; however, they could not anchor on injured AEC II because they lacked c(RGDfc) and were therefore more rapidly cleared from the circulation than the PER-DiR NPs. Compared with the PE-DiR NPs, the PER-DiR NPs accumulated in IPF lungs for a long time (more than 8 hours), which is important for treating lung disease. A quantitative region of interest (ROI) analysis of PER-DiR NPs accumulation was performed by detecting DiR signal variation in the lungs and other organs (Fig. 4E). Moreover, we evaluated PER-DiI NPs behavior in lung tissues after administration at different times (Fig. 4F). After administration at 0.5 hours, increasing levels of overlapping yellow fluorescence in lung blood vessels were observed for PER-DiI NPs labeled in red and MOMC marked in green, indicating that the PER-DiI NPs arrived at IPF lung tissues through reprogramming to form MOMC/PER-DiI in the blood circulation. Then, the red and green signals were separated at the time point of 2 hours, indicating that the PER-DiI NPs were released from the reprogrammed MOMC/PER-DiI due to the overexpression of MMP-2 in the IPF mice. Furthermore, the released PER-DiI NPs showed a wide distribution in the lung tissues at 4 hours after intravenous injection, which is powerful for treating diseases. These data demonstrated that PER NPs could target IPF lungs by means of attaching to circulating MOMC quickly and could accumulate in lung tissues for a long time to achieve therapeutic efficacy.

(A) Schematic of PER NPs circulation in vivo, reprogramming of MOMC/PER, and recruitment to IPF tissue. (B) The targeting ability of PER-DiI NPs. (C) The accumulation of PER-DiI NPs in normal and IPF lungs. (D) Fluorescence IVIS imaging (n = 3). (E) Ex vivo fluorescence imaging and quantification of major organs (n = 3). (F) The accumulation PER-DiI NPs in the lungs at different times. Lung function indexes of GSH (G), SOD (H), and MDA (I). TGF- (J), IL-1 (K), and IL-4 (L) by ELISA assay (n = 5). (M) Proliferation of fibroblasts. (N) Expression of collagen I. Statistical significance was calculated via one-way ANOVA.

We further investigated the antifibrotic efficacy of PER NPs in vivo. With IPF progression, injured AEC II gradually died out due to oxidative stress, which leads to mouse suffocation. Hence, restoring normal lung function has important significance. Compared with the BLM group, the PER NPs group had the promising abilities to repair injured lungs and keep them normal. GSH and SOD levels in the PER NPs group were obviously improved with 0.3- and 1-fold, respectively, which could relieve the oxidative stress in injured AEC II to some extent. The level of malondialdehyde (MDA), a key indicator of oxidative stress, was reduced 0.3-fold in the PER NPs group compared with the BLM group (Fig. 4, G to I). Compared with controls, treatment with PER NPs reduced the production of the three cytokines (TGF-, IL-1, and IL-4) in the lungs by 1-, 0.85-, and 0.7-fold, respectively, which showed that the PER NPs effectively inhibited the inflammatory response in IPF lungs (Fig. 4, J to L). We also examined the levels of TGF-, IL-1, and IL-4 in the spleen tissues (fig. S7, B to D), which showed consistent results. These results indicated that PER NPs could treat IPF by inhibiting inflammatory responses in IPF lungs. As seen in Fig. 4M, immunofluorescence staining results revealed that the population levels of fibroblasts CD90+ labeled in green remained in a relatively stable range, while the population levels of activated fibroblasts indicated great proliferation in the BLM group, supporting the conclusion that compared with no treatment group, the PER NPs had an efficient ability to reverse IPF by inhibiting the activation of fibroblasts. Figure 4N showed that the expression of collagen I was notably decreased in the PER NPs group, which confirmed that PER NPs could achieve therapeutic effects by inhibiting ECM deposition.

We next investigated the antifibrosis mechanism based on the synergistic effect of TRA and AST. We firstly established the different formulations, including PLGA-PEG-TRA-AST (PPTA), PLGA-PEG-TRA (PPT), and PLGA-PEG-AST (PPA), and the morphologies of PPA, PPT, and PPTA were evaluated by TEM (fig S8). As shown in Fig. 5A, the results of immunofluorescence staining showed that the expression of the vimentin as cytoskeletal protein was increased after treatment with different formulations in human lung epithelial cell carcinoma (A549). In particular, compared with other treatments, the PER NPs significantly increased the expression of vimentin, indicating that PER NPs had the capacity to keep injured AEC II normal. To assess the repair mechanism induced by the drugs combination, the ROS were detected using ROS probe 2,7-dichlorofluorescin diacetate (DCFH-DA) via inverted fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. The ROS content was significant decreased in the PPTA group compared with the untreated and single-drug groups (PPT and PPA) (Fig. 5B). Although the PPA group exhibited some changes than PPT, this effect was not as strong as that in PPTA group, because the PPTA groups exhibited synergistic effect that relieved oxidative stress in injured AEC II than other control formulations. Furthermore, the PPTA group also showed a reduced mitochondrial membrane potential in TGF-induced cells (Fig. 5C), which supported the conclusion that the efficacy in PPTA group was the result of repairing mitochondrial function with relief of oxidative stress in the mitochondria. In the microenvironment of IPF lungs, myofibroblast can be derived from injured AEC II undergoing epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which aggravates the progression of IPF. As observed in a wound healing assay and invasion assay (Fig. 5D), PPTA effectively inhibited the occurrence of EMT. Furthermore, fibronectin is a structural protein in the ECM, which is a crucial indicator of IPF progression. The expression of fibronectin was obviously decreased in PPTA group than PPT and PPA groups, thus inhibiting the differentiation of injured AEC II into myofibroblast (Fig. 5E). Next, we also tested IPF-reversing efficacy by monitoring the recovery of the lung architecture and improvement in lung functions in vivo. As shown in Fig. 5F, collagen I deposition in the PPTA group returned to normal levels, as determined by H&E and Masson staining, demonstrating that the PPTA could recover the architecture of injured lungs compared with no treatment or single-drug groups (PPT and PPA). Similarly, the expressions of -SMA and collagen I were tested by immunohistochemistry (IHC), which also obtained the same results that the synergistic effect of PPTA could effectively inhibit myofibroblast activation and ECM deposition. In addition, the level of hydroxyproline, the main component of the ECM, was also decreased after treatment with PPTA compared with other treatments (Fig. 5G), suggesting that PPTA had the ability to diminish ECM deposition and retard IPF progression. Furthermore, we detected the expression of -SMA to evaluate the myofibroblasts activation by Western blotting. The lungs were collected after treatment with PPTA, PPT, or PPA for 28 days. The results showed that -SMA expression, as the major evaluation index for IPF, was significantly reduced in PPTA group (Fig. 5H). In addition, the results of real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) showed that the relative mRNA expressions of CTGF (Ctgf) and -SMA (Acta2) significantly decreased in PPTA group, which indicated that the combination of AST and TRA can achieve efficient therapeutic efficacy by inhibiting myofibroblasts overactivation (Fig. 5, I and J). Moreover, MDA expression decreased, and SOD and GSH levels increased after treatment in PPTA group compared with the PPT and PPA groups. Together, these results implied that the combination of AST and TRA could recover IPF lung function through synergistic effect that was not observed with the other treatments (Fig. 5, K to M). The various formulations as mentioned above were safe by intravenous injection through H&E staining (fig. S9).

(A) Expression of the vimentin in vitro. (B) The ROS level in vitro. (C) The changes of mitochondrial membrane potential. (D) Invasion assay. (E) Fibronectin expression. (F) H&E, Masson, and IHC staining. (G) The level of hydroxyproline. (H) The -SMA and -actin by Western blotting. The mRNA expression of Acta2 (I) and Ctgf (J) by qPCR (n = 3). Contents of GSH (K), MDA (L), and SOD (M) (n = 5). Statistical significance was calculated via one-way ANOVA.

To further investigate the antifibrotic efficacy of MOMC/PER and pirfenidone as a conventional therapeutics for IPF, we evaluated the ability of these treatments to repair lung tissue and inhibit collagen I deposition through H&E and Masson staining, respectively, after 28 days of administration. As shown in Fig. 6A, the alveolar structure in the BLM group collapsed, and alveolar wall thickness increased notably, indicating that collagen I was accumulated and that alveolar heterogeneity was aggravated. Similarly, the alveolar morphologies in the pirfenidone group also showed collapse via H&E staining. In contrast, MOMC/PER could obviously repair the collapsed part of the alveolar space, narrow the spaces between the alveoli, and produce a thinner alveolar wall that tended to appear normal by H&E staining, which demonstrated that MOMC/PER had greater reparative effect on alveolar structure than pirfenidone. In addition, MOMC/PER group showed notable decrease compared with the pirfenidone group in inflammatory cell infiltration. The PER NPs were also more competent in restoring alveolar structure than the clinical drug pirfenidone. This effect was observed because the PER NPs could undergo reprogramming to form MOMC/PER in the blood circulation and then reach their destination, which was consistent with the above results. We further confirmed therapeutic efficacy in regard to ECM deposition by Masson staining (Fig. 6B). Compared with that in the pirfenidone group, the ECM accumulation in the lungs, which appeared as blue staining, was notably reduced in the MOMC/PER group. The results for Masson staining showed that MOMC/PER had greater power than pirfenidone to prevent IPF progression by inhibiting ECM deposition. The main reason for the limited therapeutic effect of pirfenidone was its low bioavailability as an oral drug, and onefold treatment target is the second therapeutic limitation of pirfenidone. Overall, the antifibrotic efficacy in the MOMC/PER group was the best efficacy observed through H&E and Masson staining, and PER NPs had better efficacy than pirfenidone or MOMC. In addition, the fibrosis score of different formulations showed the same trend in fig. S10. These data demonstrated that MOMC/PER showed a preferable combination efficacy over the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)approved therapeutic pirfenidone or using MOMC or PER NPs alone.

(A) H&E staining. (B) Masson staining. The levels of TGF- in the lungs (C) and spleen tissues (D). N.S., not significant. The levels of IL-1 in the lungs (E) and spleen tissues (F). BUN (G), ALT (H), and aspartate aminotransferase (I) in serum (n = 4). Statistical significance was calculated via one-way ANOVA.

Then, we further evaluated the antifibrotic effect in various groups by examining biochemical indexes of IPF. We first examined the expressions of TGF- and IL-1 in the lungs and spleen tissues, respectively. The results in the lungs showed that TGF- expression was reduced onefold in the MOMC/PER group (P = 0.015) compared with the BLM group and became close to normal (Fig. 6, C and D). However, there was no significant difference between the pirfenidone group and the BLM group, and the level of TGF- in the PER NPs group was lower than that in the pirfenidone group. In addition, the TGF- level in the spleen tissues was significantly decreased in the MOMC/PER group (P = 0.002) compared with the BLM group. However, the level of TGF- in the pirfenidone group was similar to that in the BLM group. The main reason is that pirfenidone is used to treat IPF by inhibiting the accumulation of collagen I, but it has no therapeutic effect on the simultaneous inflammatory response or cytokine expression. The results demonstrated that MOMC/PER had the best antifibrotic efficacy, which was superior to the efficacy achieved by pirfenidone and was mediated by inhibiting the expression of cytokines in the lungs. Furthermore, we detected the expression of IL-1 in the lungs and spleen tissues to investigate the antifibrotic effects of different formulations (Fig. 6, E and F). The trends in IL-1 expression were similar to TGF-; all the treatments could reduce the expression of IL-1, and MOMC/PER showed the best therapeutic efficacy (P = 0.001) in all the treatments. In addition, the IL-1 level in the pirfenidone group was maximal, indicating that compared with the other treatment groups, including the MOMC/PER and PER NPs alone groups, the pirfenidone group showed minimal anti-inflammatory effects. These results indicated that MOMC/PER could achieve a greater treatment effect on IPF than pirfenidone by inhibiting the expression of cytokines in the inflammatory phase; the efficacy of PER NPs was second only to MOMC/PER, and pirfenidone and MOMC were weaker than the PER NPs.

To assess the safety of the treatments in vivo, we then evaluated biological indexes for each formulation after treatment. The levels of blood urea nitrogen (BUN), alanine transaminase (ALT), and aspartate aminotransferase were detected to evaluate the function of the kidneys, liver, and heart, respectively (Fig. 6, G to I). The levels of BUN, ALT, and aspartate aminotransferase were not significantly different between the pirfenidone and other groups (the MOMC/PER, PER NPs, and MOMC groups). As an oral drug approved by the FDA for the treatment of IPF, pirfenidone is highly recognized for its safety in application. Similarly, our different formulations obtained results of safety equivalent to pirfenidone for a certain period of time, indicating that MOMC/PER, MOMC, and PER NPs could also be safely administered by intravenous injection and could be used clinically.

IPF is characterized by injured AEC II and activated myofibroblast, resulting in ECM deposition. To date, the FDA has approved only two drugs (pirfenidone and nintedanib) for IPF treatment. Unfortunately, curing end-stage IPF is inefficient due to the narrow therapeutic spectrums and insufficient accumulation of these drugs in the lungs (3). As a result, traditional therapies have done little to reverse IPF (4). To address this problem, we developed programmed therapeutics MOMC/PER to reverse IPF by efficient lung delivery, programmed modules, and double synergetic strategies.

Two synergetic strategies including drug/drug and cell/drug involved in reversing IPF were shown for the MOMC/PER here. First, the drug/drug as weeding and uprooting strategy could repair injured AEC II and inhibit myofibroblast activation, achieving first synergetic antifibrosis effect. In particular, one drug (AST) acted as the uprooting part of the treatment strategy, repairing injured AEC II by neutralizing oxidative stress. The other drug (TRA) acted as the weeding portion of the strategy, inhibiting the differentiation of fibroblasts into myofibroblast by suppressing CTGF production. Second, some studies have demonstrated that MOMC is multipotent cell that can be specifically recruited to injured lung tissues through interactions between chemokine receptors and chemotactic factors (3638) and contribute to lung tissue normalization and regeneration (39). In addition, MOMC also plays a vital role in regulating the population of immune cells during the inflammatory phase of disease progression (40). Similarly, our results also showed that MOMC could inhibit the proliferation of inflammatory cells, such as lymphocytes and white blood cells. This is another synergetic effect called cell/drug. PER NPs also exhibited greater antifibrotic effects than pirfenidone due to their efficient lung-targeting ability and combination of AST and TRA, as these PER NPs could target MOMC in the circulation, accumulate in the lungs effectively, and then reverse IPF collaboratively. The limited treatment efficacy of pirfenidone is mainly due to its low bioavailability, narrow therapeutic spectrum, and functions by inhibiting myofibroblast activation only.

In addition, MOMC/PER is strategically distinct from nanodelivery carrier (41) and drug-loaded cells carrier (14). The traditional nanodelivery system for IPF always presents dissatisfactory accumulation and unexpected drug release at the lesion site. Even these defects can be avoided for IPF therapy, the therapeutic efficacy is also limited to onefold treating target, and these shortcomings make IPF hard to reverse. In addition to nanodelivery systems, cell-mediated drug delivery has also received more attention in disease treatment. The classic cell-based delivery strategy for treating disease is reliant on drugs being loaded into cells by endocytosis (15). However, cells are difficult to load with large quantities of drugs, and chemotherapeutics may be highly toxic to cells undergoing loading. Hopefully, the PER NPs adhere to the MOMC surface in our study could surmount this challenge in conventional drug loading of cells. PER NPs were firstly attached to MOMC surface and then precisely delivered to the lungs via the homing ability of MOMC and activated for IPF reversion. However, there is still an unresolved point in our research, which is that the treatment mechanism of MOMC remains unclear. Our results indicated that MOMC might up-regulate AEC II proliferation or recover injured AEC II to normalize the lungs. The mechanism of MOMC differentiation for IPF treatment requires further exploration. In addition, some studies have indicated that MOMC could partly treat early IPF through regulating the immune response by inhibiting the proliferation of immune cells in vivo (42). It is unclear whether MOMC is effective for IPF therapy during different periods.

Compared with conventional antifibrotic strategies, our previous unknown programmed therapeutics MOMC/PER has showed accurate lung targeting and excellent therapeutic effects. The excellent antifibrotic efficacy of the MOMC/PER was achieved through the following features. (i) MOMC has the ability to backpack PER NPs, constructing programmed therapeutics MOMC/PER. (ii) MOMC/PER can precisely accumulate in IPF lung tissues due to the homing ability of the MOMC. (iii) PER NPs are sensitively released from MOMC/PER due to the overexpression of MMP-2 in the IPF microenvironment. (iv) Released PER NPs are able to retarget injured AEC II through c(RGDfc). (v) PER NPs can reduce the secretion of TGF- by occupying TGF-latent sites. (vi) Two drugs loaded into PER NPs are the key factors in achieving IPF reversion of drug/drug as weeding and uprooting. In addition, MOMC also participates in AEC II regeneration using cell/drug strategy. Specifically, MOMC-mediated delivery therapeutics is convenient, and the materials used in our PER NPs have all been approved by the FDA, which indicates certain advantages for further clinical development. Overall, we have proposed an innovative concept to cure IPF through using native cells as a delivery carrier and a dual-drug combination as therapeutic agents, and this strategy is likely to be applicable to other major diseases.

MMP-2, -SMA rabbit anti-mouse antibody, and DCFH-DA were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, USA). SPC rabbit anti-mouse antibody was purchased from Millipore (St. Louis, USA). Lymphocyte isolation kit was purchased from Solarbio Science & Technology Co. Ltd. (Beijing, China). PLGA-PEG-Mal and PLGA-PEG-c(RGDfc) were purchased from Jinan Daigan Biomaterial Co. Ltd. (Jinan, China). RPMI 1640, fetal bovine serum (FBS), and bicinchoninic acid (BCA) protein assay kit were purchased from Jiangsu KeyGEN BioTECH Co. Ltd. (Nanjing, China). The peptide E5 (CGPLGIAGQCGGRSFFLLRRIQGCRFRNTVDD) was synthesized by Top Peptide Biotechnology Co. Ltd. (Shanghai, China). AST was purchased from Yuanye Bio-Technology Co. Ltd. (Shanghai, China). TRA was purchased from J&K Scientific Co. Ltd. (Beijing, China). DiI, 3,3-dioctadecyloxacarbocyanine perchlorate (DiO), and DiR were purchased from Fanbo Biochemicals Co. Ltd. (Beijing, China). DAPI (4,6-diamino-2-phenylindole) and mitochondrial membrane potential kit of JC-1 were purchased from Beyotime Biotechnology Co. Ltd. (Shanghai, China). CXC chemokine ligand 12 (CXCL 12) and CC chemokine ligand 19 (CCL 19) were purchased from Zoonbio Biotechnology Co. Ltd. (Beijing, China). BLM was purchased from Zhejiang Huahai Pharmaceutical Co. Ltd. (Linhai, China). TGF- was purchased from Multi Sciences Biotech Co. Ltd. (Hangzhou, China). C6 was purchased from Tokyo Chemical Industry Co. Ltd. (Tokyo, Japan). LysoTracker Red DND-99 kit was purchased from Thermo Fisher Scientific (Waltham, USA). Nanog, TGF-/Smad and collagen I rabbit anti-mouse antibodies, and H&E and Masson staining kits were purchased from Servicebio Co. Ltd. (Nanjing, China). GSH, MDA, SOD, and hydroxyproline were purchased from Jiancheng Biotech Co. Ltd. (Nanjing, China). IL-1 and IL-4 detection kits were purchased from eBioscience (Waltham, USA). TGF- detection kit was purchased from BioLegend (CA, USA). Polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) was purchased from PALL (NY, USA). Electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) was purchased from Tanon Science & Technology Co. Ltd. (Shanghai, China).

MOMC was isolated from peripheral blood by a mouse lymphocyte isolation kit. To obtain the MOMC, peripheral blood was collected from the C57BL/6J mice of IPF with EDTA and diluted three times with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The isolated protocol of MOMC was as follows: The mouse Percoll was added into diluted peripheral blood solution, and MOMC was isolated from peripheral blood by centrifugation at 600 rpm for 30 min. The solution was divided into upper, middle, and lower layers, and MOMC existed in the middle layer. Then, the MOMC was taken into centrifuge tube of 15 ml, and cell washing buffer of 5 ml was added into the tube. The cell suspension was then centrifuged for another 30 min, and it needed to be repeated three times to obtain MOMC. Last, the cell deposits were resuspended, and the suspension was put into the culture dish in RPMI 1640 medium with 10% FBS at 37C and 5% CO2 (22, 23). The adherence time for dishes of MOMC was about 2 weeks. The MOMC was a kind of adherent cells, and the morphologies of cells were fusiform. After the cells adhere to the dish, the medium was changed once every 3 days.

PER NPs were prepared by antisolvent precipitation method. Peptide E5 modification was prepared as follows. Specifically, the PLGA-PEG-Mal and PLGA-PEG-c(RGDfc) (mass ratio, 10:1) and dual drugs of AST and/or TRA were dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (50 mg/ml, 2 ml), added dropwise into deionized water with 100 ml, and then stirred with 300 rpm for 2 hours. Next, the prepared nanoparticle solution (NPs) was centrifuged at 2800 rpm for 15 min to discard the large particles and free drug. The NPs were then condensed to concentration of 2 ml by ultrafiltration device for further use. Last, the peptide E5 was added into the solution of NPs to form PER NPs. The preparation process of other groups including PLGA-PEG-c(RGDfc) (PR NPs), the preparation of PLGA-PEG-E5 (PE NPs), and the preparation of PLGA-PEG (PP NPs) were similar to PER NPs.

The preparation of MOMC/PER was carried out by incubating MOMC with PER NPs. Briefly, the MOMC (2 105 cells/ml) was cultured in a petri dishes with a diameter of 100 mm. After incubated with the FBS-free media for 1 hour, PER NPs at a TRA concentration of 40 g/ml were added into MOMC medium and incubated for 2 hours at 37C and 5% CO2. At the same time, the CXCR4 receptor and ligand peptide E5 would undergo bioconjugate reaction.

The hydrodynamic diameters and potentials for PER NPs suspended in 1 PBS were measured by Brookhaven Instruments (NY, USA). The morphologies of PER NPs were characterized by TEM (Hitachi TEM system, Japan).

For MOMC/PER-DiI, characterization of adhesion between MOMC and PER-DiI NPs was imaged by CLSM (Carl Zeiss 700, Germany). Specifically, MOMC was cultured in 35-mm culture dishes and incubated with PER-DiI NPs for 2 hours, and the preparation of PER-DiI NPs was the same as mentioned above. The nucleus of MOMC was labeled with DAPI and MOMC membrane was labeled by DiO. For SEM characterization, MOMC/PER-DiI was coated with gold/palladium and examined by Hitachi-SU8020 (Japan).

The sensitive release properties of PER NPs from MOMC/PER in vitro was evaluated under the microenvironment of MMP-2 in vitro. MMP-2 enzyme was applied to release PER NPs by degrading the linker of GPLGIAGQ between PER NPs and MOMC. The characterization of released activity was investigated in vitro. First, MMP-2 (2 g/ml, 1 ml) was added into MOMC/PER-DiI medium for 30 min. Then, MOMC and released PER-DiI NPs were detected by flow cytometry (BD FACSCalibur, USA) or fixed by 4% paraformaldehyde (w/v) for CLSM and 2.5% glutaral for TEM. Besides, the nucleus of MOMC was labeled with DAPI for 30 min at 37C, and the MOMC membrane was labeled with DiO for 15 min at 37C. MMP-2 enzyme was dissolved in deionized water and free RPMI 1640 (volume ratio, 1:20) at a concentration of 2 g/ml. After that, the released PER NPs and MOMC in solution were prepared for the other testing assay and image.

The loading ability of MOMC was detected by the concentration of TRA and AST. First, MOMC was cultured in dishes with 100 mm. After MOMC adhered on the dishes, PER NPs were added into the culture dishes and incubated with MOMC for 2 hours in RPMI 1640 with free FBS, and then, MOMC/PER was washed thrice with PBS and digested with 0.25% trypsin-EDTA solution. Next, cells were harvested by centrifugation at 1000 rpm for 3 min and counted with a hemocytometer. Last, the cells were resuspended with PBS of 1 ml, and the absorbance was determined at 326 nm for TRA and 491 nm for AST by Multiskan GO (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA).

The migration capacity of MOMC/PER was investigated by a Transwell device. First, the MOMC were cultured into the upper chambers with pore sizes of 8.0 m with 2 104 in 400 l of RPMI 1640 with FBS-free media for 24 hours. The cells were divided into three groups, including CXCL 12 () or CCL 19 () of MOMC, CXCL 12 (+) or CCL 19 (+) of MOMC, and CXCL 12 (+) or CCL 19 (+) of MOMC/PER. RPMI 1640 with 10% FBS and CXCL 12 (10 g/ml) or CCL 19 of 600 l was added to the lower chamber into the 24-well plates. Then, the MOMC in MOMC/PER group was added PER NPs at concentration of 40 g/ml and incubated for another 24 hours. At last, the Transwell chambers were stained with crystal violet and were dissolved with 33% acetic acid, and the absorbance of solution was tested at 570 nm.

C57BL/6J male mice were obtained from East China Normal University Laboratory Animal Technology Co. Ltd. (Shanghai, China) and housed with a 12-hour light/12-hour dark cycle at 25C. All the animal protocols and procedures were performed under the guidelines for human and responsible use of animals in research approved by the regional ethics committee of China Pharmaceutical University. After acclimatization for 7 days, mice were subjected to IPF model experiments. IPF mice models were established by inhalation of BLM through endotracheal intubation (2 U/kg, 40 l; Braintree Scientific, USA). Next, the mice were randomly assigned to the treatment. For the cell culture, A549 and MOMC were cultured in RPMI 1640 media containing 10% FBS and 1% penicillin and streptomycin at 37C and 5% CO2.

A549 cells were cultured in six-well plates at 37C and 5% CO2 for 24 hours and then incubated for another 24 hours with pure PPA, PPT, or PPTA at TRA concentration of 20 nM. The expression of vimentin and fibronectin was investigated by immunofluorescence staining.

The invasion ability of TGF-induced A549 cells was evaluated by wound healing tests after treated with various formulations. First, A549 cells were seeded in six-well plates at 15 104 cells per dish and incubated for 24 hours. Next, a 10-l pipette tip was used to scratch wells in the middle of the dishes, and then, A549 cells were washed three times with PBS to remove suspended cells. The cells from each group were imaged by inverted fluorescence microscope (Nikon, Japan) to observe the extents of wound healing after treated with PPT, PPA, PPTA, and PER NPs at 24 hours.

The migration capability of TGF-induced A549 cells was investigated by a Transwell device. The A549 cells of 5 104 in 400 l of RPMI 1640 with FBS-free media were added to the upper chambers with pore sizes of 8.0 m for 24 hours, and RPMI 1640 with 10% FBS media of 600 l was added to the lower chamber into the 24-well plates. Then, the cells were incubated with PPT, PPA, PPTA, and PER NPs (20 nM of TRA concentration) for another 24 hours. After incubation, the Transwell chambers were stained with crystal violet and were dissolved with 33% acetic acid, and the absorbance of solution was tested at 570 nm.

A549 cells were seeded on six-well plates (15 104 per well) and incubated overnight. First, the cells were activated by TGF-, and then, various treatment groups were incubated with A549 cells for 24 hours (TGF-, normal, PPT, PPA, PPTA, and PER NPs). Next, the ROS probe DCFH-DA (5 M) was added into the dishes and incubated with cells in RPMI 1640 media with free FBS at 37C under 5% CO2 in the dark for 15 min. Last, cells were digested, and the content of ROS was analyzed by flow cytometry (BD Accuri C6, USA) and imaged by inverted fluorescence microscope, respectively.

A549 cells were cultured on six-well plates (15 104 per well) overnight at 37C and 5% CO2. After treated with different formulations for 24 hours, 500 l of mitochondrial membrane potential reagent of JC-1 (1) solution was added into the dishes for 20 min. Then, the cells were stained by 4% paraformaldehyde (w/v) and imaged by inverted fluorescence microscope.

First, A549 cells were seeded on a 35-mm sterile glass bottom culture dishes (2 105 cells) and cultured overnight in RPMI 1640 with 10% FBS. The preparation of PR-C6 and PP-C6 was same as mentioned above for PER NPs. The PR-C6, PP-C6, and C6 were then incubated with A549 cells for 4 hours at 5 g/ml. Next, the cells were washed three times by PBS, and the nucleus was stained with DAPI. Images and data were acquired with CLSM and flow cytometry (BD Accuri C6, USA).

The A549 cells of 5 104 were cultured in a 35-mm sterile glass bottom culture dishes. After the cells were cultured overnight in RPMI 1640 with 10% FBS for 24 hours, PR-C6 and PP-C6 were incubated with A549 cells for 1 and 4 hours at 5 g/ml. Then, the cell dishes were washed three times by PBS and fix by 4% paraformaldehyde (w/v). Lysosome was stained with LysoTracker Red DND-99 kit (100 nM) for 15 min, and the dishes were washed three times with PBS. Then, the cell nucleus was stained by DAPI like above method. Images were acquired by CLSM.

MOMC/PER-DiR was prepared by the method as mentioned above for PER NPs. The homing ability of MOMC was detected in vivo by IVIS imaging system (Kodak, USA). C57BL/6J mice were induced IPF by inhalation of BLM. Then, the IPF mice were injected with MOMC/PER-DiR, MOMC-DiR, and free DiR by intravenous injection and tested by IVIS living system at different point times. Then, the mice are sacrificed, and the lungs and other organs were harvested for ex vivo imaging after 8 hours of intravenous injection. ROI was circled around the lungs and the other organs (liver, heart, spleen, and kidneys). The fluorescence intensity of the DiR was determined by living image software.

The PER NPs can be released from MOMC/PER-DiI by MMP-2, owing to responsive blocking the linker between PER NPs and MOMC. We have investigated the homing capability, responsive release, and retarget ability. We first administrated MOMC/PER-DiI by intravenous injection, and the preparation of MOMC/PER-DiI was applied by the methods as mentioned above. The mice were sacrificed, and lung tissues were harvested at different point time of 30 min, 1 hour, and 2 hours in a dark place. First, the lung tissues were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (w/v), and then, the tissues were embedded and dewaxed before slicing. Next, the lung slices were labeled by Nanog and SPC at 4C for 1 hour and washed with 0.2% Triton X-100 for three times. Then, they were incubated with relevant secondary antibodies for 2 hours. Thereafter, the slices were stained with DAPI and viewed under fluorescence microscope.

The IPF mice were injected with PER-DiR NPs, PE-DiR NPs, PR-DiR NPs, and PP-DiR NPs by intravenous injection at different point times for 1, 4, 8, 12, and 24 hours and tested by IVIS imaging system. The preparation of PER-DiR NPs, PE-DiR NPs, PR-DiR NPs, and PP-DiR NPs were the same method as mentioned above, and then, the mice were sacrificed, and the lungs and other organs were harvested to detect ex vivo imaging after intravenous injection at 24 hours. ROI was tested on the lungs and the other organs (liver, heart spleen, and kidneys). The fluorescence intensity of the DiR was determined by living image software.

The antifibrotic efficacy in MOMC/PER, MOMC, PER NPs, and pirfenidone for IPF treatment in vivo was evaluated on IPF male mice (C57BL/6J, age of 6 to 8 weeks). The preparations of MOMC/PER and PER NPs were the same method as mentioned above. Pirfenidone was administered by gastrointestinal because it is an oral medication, and other formulations were administered via intravenous injection.

The contents of MDA, SOD, and GSH were detected after treated with various treatments in lung tissues. The protocols are as follows: Solution 1 of 1.5 ml was added into the lung tissues solution (0.5 ml) and mixed thoroughly. Then, the samples were centrifuged for 10 min at 3500 to 4000 rpm. The sample supernatant was added into 3,3,5,5-tetramethyl benaidine (TMB substrate), and the absorbance of GSH was detected after 5 to 10 min at 420 nm. The contents of SOD and MDA were tested at 550 and 532 nm, respectively.

The lungs and spleen tissues were collected and diluted in precooled solution. The IL-1, TGF-, and IL-4 in lung tissues were assayed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) method as instructed by the manufacturer. First, the wells were washed three times with a washing buffer for 3 min each time. Next, the blocking solution of 200 l was added into each well and incubated for 1 to 2 hours at 37C. Then, the sealing film was removed carefully and putted it into the washing machine and washed three to five times. Furthermore, the sample of 100 l was added and should be tested diluted appropriately to the above coated reaction wells, and the diluted biotinylated antibody working solution was added with 100 l into each well. Then, the samples were sealed with a sealing membrane and incubated at 37C for 1 hour. The following step was that 100 l of diluted enzyme conjugate working solution was added into each well. Next, TMB substrate solution with 100 l was added into each well and should be avoided reaction with light for 10 to 30 min at 37C until a notable color gradient appears in the diluted standard well. Within 10 min, the absorbance of each well was measured on a microplate reader at 450 nm with zero adjustment of the blank control well.

The content of hydroxyproline was detected by a hydroxyproline detection kit. The lung tissues of 30 to 100 mg were mixed with hydrolysate to 1 ml and hydrolyzed in boiling water for 20 min. The sample solution was pH 6.0 to 6.8. Then, the serum hydrolysate was added activated carbon and mixed at 60C for 15 min. After cooling, the serum samples were centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 20 min, and the supernatant was detected by microplate reader at 550 nm.

The whole blood from mice was collected by anticoagulant tube with EDTA, and white blood cell counts (including lymphocytes and monocytes) were assayed using a standard blood analyzer (Mindray, China).

After treatment with different formulation, the lungs, heart, liver, spleen, and kidneys were harvested, and lungs were investigated by H&E, Masson, and IHC staining. Other organs were detected by H&E staining to evaluate the application security. First, the lung tissues were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (w/v) for more than 48 hours and embedded in paraffin. Then, the lung tissues were cut into 4-m sections for H&E staining and Masson staining. The levels of collagen I and -SMA were evaluated by IHC, and protocols are as follows: The slices were incubated with primary antibodies (collagen I and -SMA or fluorescently labeled CD90 and collagen I, Servicebio, China) and then incubated with corresponding secondary antibodies to detect the expression of relative proteins.

The qPCR analysis was evaluated RNA expression of Ctgf and Acta2. qPCR was conducted in ABI StepOnePlus (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA). Lung tissues (100 mg) were homogenized to extract the total RNA according to the protocols. Complementary DNA (2 g) was prepared using the Reverse Transcription System, and then, the expression of related genes was determined using q-PCR. The primers used are Acta2 (NM_007392.3), Ctgf (43), and Gapdh (NM_008084.2).

The harvested lungs were homogenized in PBS buffer and then centrifuged at 3000 rpm for 30 min. The supernatant of total protein was taken for further experiments. Total protein concentration in the solution was determined with a BCA protein assay kit. After detecting in SDS-PAGE with protein samples in different treatment groups, the bands were transferred onto PVDF membrane. Next, the PVDF membranes were blocked with 5% milk at room temperature for 2 hours and incubated with primary antibodies (-SMA, TGF-/Smad, and -actin rabbit anti-mouse antibodies) at 4C overnight and then incubated with corresponding secondary antibodies for 2 hours at room temperature. Last, the bands were detected using ECL (Tanon, China) Western blotting substrate (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA). The -actin was used as an endogenous control.

The mice were sacrificed, and the serum samples were detected in different treatment groups. The contents of ALT, aspartate aminotransferase, and BUN in the serum were determined using the relevant assay kits (Servicebio, China).

Statistical analyses were performed using GraphPad Prism software (GraphPad Software, USA). All error bars were means SEM; differences detection index between the treated groups and control groups were determined via one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). P < 0.05 was considered significantly different.

Acknowledgments: We thank the Cellular and Molecular Biology Center of China Pharmaceutical University for assistance with confocal microscopy work. Funding: This work was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (2017YFA0205400). We thank the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC; grant nos. 81773667, 81573369, and 81430082) and NSFC Projects of International Cooperation and Exchanges (81811540416). This work was also supported by the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2632018PT01 and 2632018ZD12), the 111 Project from the Ministry of Education of China and the State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs of China (B16046), the Double First-Class Project (CPU2018GY06), and a project funded by the Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions. Author contributions: H.-L.J., H.-P.H., X.C., and L.X. conceived the project, designed all the experiments, analyzed the data, and wrote the manuscript. X.C. and L.X. conducted the experiments. X.C. and Y.W. analyzed the data. X.C., Y.W., C.-X.Y., Y.-J.H., T.-J.Z., X.-D.G., and L.L. wrote the manuscript. All authors edited the manuscript. Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests. Data and materials availability: All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.

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EdiGene and Immunochina Announce Research and Development Collaboration to Develop Allogeneic CAR-T Therapy for Cancer | More News | News Channels -…

DetailsCategory: More NewsPublished on Thursday, 28 May 2020 11:34Hits: 167

BEIJING, China & CAMBRIDGE, MA, USA I May 27, 2020 I EdiGene, Inc., which develops genome editing technologies to accelerate drug discovery and develop novel therapeutics for a broad range of diseases, and Immunochinaa company dedicated to innovative gene and cellular technology today announced that they have formed a research and development collaboration to develop allogeneic CAR-T therapy for cancer.

Under this partnership, both companies will combine EdiGenes expertise in genome editing and allogeneic T-cell process with Immunochinas expertise in innovative CAR-T technology to develop potentially best-in-class allogeneic CAR-T therapeutics. Terms are not disclosed.

"EdiGene is a leading gene-editing company with cutting edge technology platform. It is our great pleasure to work with this team," said Ting He, Ph.D.founder and CEO of Immunochina, "Make the Incurable Curable, which is Immunochinas vision. We have accumulated considerable experience in late-stage hematological malignancies, with two IND approvals. Although a number of break throughs have been made by autologous T cells lately, allogeneic T cells could also play an important role in the future. The cooperation is a big step for both teams, and I believe we will make exciting discoveries together."

We are excited to collaborate with Immunochina, one of the leading clinical-stage CAR-T companies, said Dong Wei, Ph.D.CEO of EdiGene, We believe that allogeneic T-cell therapeutics has tremendous potential, by offering innovative T-cell therapies off the shelf with more effective quality control and lower cost. By combining the expertise of EdiGene and Immunochina, we will be well positioned to develop such therapeutics and advance to clinics, one step closer to help the cancer patients in need.

About EdiGene, Inc

EdiGene is a biotechnology company focused on leveraging the cutting-edge genome editing technologies to accelerate drug discovery and develop novel therapeutics for a broad range of genetic diseases and cancer. The company has established its proprietary ex vivo genome-editing platforms for hematopoietic stem cells and T cells, in vivo therapeutic platform based on RNA base editing, and high-throughput genome-editing screening to discover novel targeted therapies. Founded in 2015, EdiGene is headquartered in Beijing, with subsidiaries in Guangzhou, China and Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. More information can be found at http://www.edigene.com.

About Immunochina

Immunochina is committed to the application of innovative gene and cellular technology for treatment of lethal diseases. The company owns integrated CAR-T platform, including core technologies such as large-scale viral vector production and primary immune cell processing. The pipeline includes several CAR-T candidates for treatment of advanced cancer, with two IND approvals. Founded in 2015, Immunochina is headquartered in Beijing. More information can be found at http://www.immunochina.com

SOURCE: EdiGene

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Stem Cell Therapy Industry Global Market Research and Analysis 2020-2026 – Cole of Duty

Global Stem Cell Therapy Market reports provide in-depth analysis of Top Players, Geography, End users, Applications, Competitor analysis, Revenue, Price, Gross Margin, Market Share, Import-Export data, Trends and Forecast.

Firstly, the Stem Cell Therapy Market Report provides a basic overview of the industry including definitions, classifications, applications and chain structure. The Stem Cell Therapy market analysis is provided for the international markets including development trends, competitive landscape analysis, and key regions development status.

Key Players covered in this report are Osiris Therapeutics, NuVasive, Chiesi Pharmaceuticals, JCR Pharmaceutical, Pharmicell, Medi-post, Anterogen, Molmed, Takeda (TiGenix).

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Our industry professionals are working reluctantly to understand, assemble and timely deliver assessment on impact of COVID-19 disaster on many corporations and their clients to help them in taking excellent business decisions. We acknowledge everyone who is doing their part in this financial and healthcare crisis.

The Global Stem Cell Therapy Market report focuses on global major leading industry players providing information such as company profiles, product picture and specification, capacity, production, price, cost, revenue and contact information. Upstream raw materials and equipment and downstream demand analysis is also carried out.

Major Points covered in this report are as below

Major Points covered in this report are as below

The Stem Cell Therapy industry development trends and marketing channels are analyzed. Finally, the feasibility of new investment projects are assessed and overall research conclusions offered.

With the tables and figures, the report provides key statistics on the state of the industry and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the market.

Development policies and plans, manufacturing processes and cost structures are also analyzed. This report also states import/export consumption, supply and demand figures, cost, price, revenue and gross margins.

The Stem Cell Therapy Market report provides key statistics on the market status of the Stem Cell Therapy manufacturers and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the industry.

We can also provide the customized data for separate regions like North America, United States, Canada, Mexico, Asia-Pacific, China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Indonesia, Singapore, Rest of Asia-Pacific, Europe, Germany, France, UK, Italy, Spain, Russia, Rest of Europe, Central and South America, Brazil, Argentina, Rest of South America, Middle East and Africa, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Rest of Middle East and Africa

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Stem Cell Therapy Industry Global Market Research and Analysis 2020-2026 - Cole of Duty

Coronavirus business impact: Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) Market Extracts Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer…

The report on the Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market provides a birds eye view of the current proceeding within the Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market. Further, the report also takes into account the impact of the novel COVID-19 pandemic on the Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market and offers a clear assessment of the projected market fluctuations during the forecast period. The different factors that are likely to impact the overall dynamics of the Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market over the forecast period (2019-2029) including the current trends, growth opportunities, restraining factors, and more are discussed in detail in the market study.

For top companies in United States, European Union and China, this report investigates and analyzes the production, value, price, market share and growth rate for the top manufacturers, key data from 2019 to 2025.

The Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market report firstly introduced the basics: definitions, classifications, applications and market overview; product specifications; manufacturing processes; cost structures, raw materials and so on. Then it analyzed the worlds main region market conditions, including the product price, profit, capacity, production, supply, demand and market growth rate and forecast etc. In the end, the Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market report introduced new project SWOT analysis, investment feasibility analysis, and investment return analysis.

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The major players profiled in this Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market report include:

Regional and Country-level AnalysisThe report offers an exhaustive geographical analysis of the global Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market, covering important regions, viz, North America, Europe, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, India and Central & South America. It also covers key countries (regions), viz, U.S., Canada, Germany, France, U.K., Italy, Russia, China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam, Mexico, Brazil, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, UAE, etc.The report includes country-wise and region-wise market size for the period 2015-2026. It also includes market size and forecast by each application segment in terms of revenue for the period 2015-2026.Competition AnalysisIn the competitive analysis section of the report, leading as well as prominent players of the global Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market are broadly studied on the basis of key factors. The report offers comprehensive analysis and accurate statistics on revenue by the player for the period 2015-2020. It also offers detailed analysis supported by reliable statistics on price and revenue (global level) by player for the period 2015-2020.On the whole, the report proves to be an effective tool that players can use to gain a competitive edge over their competitors and ensure lasting success in the global Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market. All of the findings, data, and information provided in the report are validated and revalidated with the help of trustworthy sources. The analysts who have authored the report took a unique and industry-best research and analysis approach for an in-depth study of the global Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) market.The following players are covered in this report:JanssenQiagenAdvanced Cell DiagnosticsApoCellBiofluidicaClearbridge BiomedicsCytoTrackCelseeFluxionGilupiCynvenioOn-chipYZY BioBioViewFluidigmIkonisysAdnaGenIVDiagnosticsMiltenyi BiotecScreenCellSilicon BiosystemsCirculating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) Breakdown Data by TypeCellSearchOthersCirculating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) Breakdown Data by ApplicationBreast Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentProstate Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentColorectal Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentLung Cancer Diagnosis and TreatmentOther Cancers Diagnosis and Treatment

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Key Market Related Questions Addressed in the Report:

Important Information that can be extracted from the Report:

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Coronavirus business impact: Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer Stem Cells (CSCs) Market Extracts Circulating Tumor Cells (CTCs) and Cancer...

Regenerative Medicine Market to Exhibit a CAGR of 26.1% by 2026; Rising Prevalence of Genetic Disorders to Fuel Demand, states Fortune Business…

Pune, May 27, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The global regenerative medicine market size is expected to reach USD 151,949.5 billion by 2026, exhibiting a CAGR of 26.1% during the forecast period. The growing R&D investment by key players for the development of innovative regenerative therapies can be a vital factor enabling the growth of the market during the forecast period, states Fortune Business Insights in a report, titled Regenerative Medicine Market Size, Share and Industry Analysis By Product (Cell Therapy, Gene Therapy, Tissue Engineering, Platelet Rich Plasma), By Application (Orthopaedics, Wound Care, Oncology), By Distribution Channel (Hospitals, Clinics) & Regional Forecast, 2019 2026 the market size stood at USD 23,841.5 Million in 2018. The growing organ transplantation surgeries will spur opportunities for the market during the forecast period.

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Market Driver:

Escalating Cases of Genetic Disorders to Augment Growth

The increasing prevalence of chronic disorders can be an essential factor enabling the growth of the market. Similarly, the growing incidence of genetic disorders will fuel demand for the market. The growing investment in R&D activities by major market players will have a positive impact on the regenerative medicine market growth during the forecast period. For instance, in March 2018, SanBio Group, a leader in regenerative medicine and therapies for neurological disorders announced that it has made a deal with Hitachi Chemical Advanced Therapeutics Solutions, LLC, a cell manufacturing company for the development and manufacturing of innovative regenerative medicines.

Furthermore, the rising cases of neurological disorders will influence the healthy growth of the market. The growing healthcare expenditure in developed and developing countries will boost the market in the forthcoming years. The ongoing clinical trials and robust pipeline products in stem cell andgene therapy will contribute tremendously to the growth of the market. The rising utilization of skin substitutes, grafts, bone matrix, and other tissue-engineered regenerative medicine in orthopedic and neurosurgical applications will augment the growth of the market.

An Overview of the Impact of COVID-19 on this Market:

The emergence of COVID-19 has brought the world to a standstill. We understand that this health crisis has brought an unprecedented impact on businesses across industries. However, this too shall pass. Rising support from governments and several companies can help in the fight against this highly contagious disease. There are some industries that are struggling and some are thriving. Overall, almost every sector is anticipated to be impacted by the pandemic.

We are taking continuous efforts to help your business sustain and grow during COVID-19 pandemics. Based on our experience and expertise, we will offer you an impact analysis of coronavirus outbreak across industries to help you prepare for the future.

To get the short-term and long-term impact of COVID-19 on this Market.

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Regional Analysis:

Development of Novel Therapies to Favor Growth in North America

The market in North America generated a revenue of USD 9,128.2 million in 2018 and is predicted to grow rapidly during the forecast period owing to the presence of major pharmaceutical companies. The growing launch of novel therapeutics and the availability of advanced technologies along with clinical trials will support growth in North America. Asia Pacific is expected to witness a high growth rate during the forecast period owing to the

developing healthcare infrastructure and facilities. The increasing stem cell research in developing countries such as India, Japan China will contribute positively to the growth of the market. For instance, In April 2013, the Japan Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare approved Regenerative Medicine law. The growing number of clinical developments of regenerative and cell-based therapies will drive the market in the region. The increasing government initiatives for human embryonic stem cell research and development will further encourage growth in the region. The surge in geriatric patients, the evolving lifestyle of people, and the growing need for novel therapies are factors likely to aid the expansion of the market in Asia Pacific.

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Key Development:

2018: Novartis announced that it has received EUs approval for one-time gene therapy Luxturna, to restore vision in people with rare and genetically-associated retinal disease.

List of the Key Companies Operating in the Regenerative Medicine Market are:

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Detailed Table of Content:

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Have a Look at Related Reports:

Gene Therapy Market Size, Share and Global Trend By Disease Indication(Cancer, Genetic disorders, Cardiovascular diseases, Ophthalmology, Neurological conditions) By Type of Vectors (Viral vectors, Non-viral vectors), By Type of Cells(Somatic cells, Germline cells) and Geography Forecast till 2026

Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market Size, Share and Global Trend By Derived Cell Type (Amniotic cells, Fibroblasts, Keratinocytes, Hepatocytes, Others), By Application (Regenerative medicines, Drug development, Toxicity testing, Reprogramming technology, Academic research, Others), By End-user (Hospitals, Education & research institutes, Biotechnological companies) and Geography Forecast till 2026

Platelet Rich Plasma Market Size, Share And Global Trend By Origin (Allogeneic, Autologous, Homologous), By Type (Pure PRP, Leukocyte rich PRP, Leukocyte rich fibrin), By Application (Orthopaedic surgery, Cosmetic surgery, General surgery, Neurosurgery, Others), And Geography Forecast Till 2026

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Regenerative Medicine Market to Exhibit a CAGR of 26.1% by 2026; Rising Prevalence of Genetic Disorders to Fuel Demand, states Fortune Business...