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Cells

Cells is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal on cell biology, molecular biology, and biophysics, published semimonthly online by MDPI.
The Nordic Autophagy Society (NAS), the Spanish Society of Hematology and Hemotherapy (SEHH) and the International Cell Death Society (ICDS) are affiliated with Cells and their members receive discounts on the article processing charges.
Indexed in PubMed | Quartile Ranking JCR - Q2 (Cell Biology)

All Articles (20,127)

Skin mast cells (MCs) play a vital role in acute allergic reactions and also contribute to chronic dermatoses partially through cytokine production. Key growth factors (GFs), such as SCF and IL-33, orchestrate MC survival and activity. Whether early responses differ between these factors remains incompletely defined. In the skin, MCs are long-lived and can proliferate outside the body but eventually exit the cell cycle. It remains unclear whether post-mitotic MCs show altered sensitivity to GFs. MCs were isolated from human foreskin and cultured in the presence of SCF + IL-4. GF-deprived cells were stimulated with either SCF or IL-33. Signaling events were determined by immunoblot. Gene expression was studied by RT-qPCR, cytokine release by ELISA, comparing dividing (3–4 weeks) with post-mitotic “aged” MCs (≥6 weeks). SCF strongly induced genes like FOS, EGR1, and NR4A2, while IL-33 was particularly effective at inducing JUN. IL-33 also prompted significant cytokine production (TNF-α, CCL1 and IL-13), whereas the activation of LIF was confined to SCF. SCF favored KIT, ERK, AKT, and STAT5 activation, whereas IL-33 preferentially stimulated JNK and p38 pathways. Although post-mitotic MCs showed diminished overall responsiveness to SCF, and with interesting differences among modules, their cytokine response to SCF remained comparable. Intriguingly, after exiting the cell cycle, MCs showed heightened sensitivity to IL-33, evidenced by increased ERK activation and TNF-α production. Collectively, IL-33 and SCF elicit markedly different early responses in human skin MCs. Chronic exposure to SCF reduces the responsiveness to this GF without eliminating their reactivity, while non-dividing MCs become more sensitive to IL-33, possibly as a compensatory adaptation.

24 February 2026

SCF and IL-33 elicit distinct IEG profiles in human skin MCs. Cells were stimulated with SCF (100 ng/mL) or IL-33 (20 ng/mL) for 30 min; RT-qPCR was used to quantify gene expression (normalized to housekeeping genes, as described in Methods). Results are expressed relative to the unstimulated control set as 1 and given as mean ± SEM and individual dots (each dot corresponding to a different skin MC culture). (a) JUN, (b) EGR1, (c) NR4A2, (d) FOS. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01. The figures were created using GraphPad Prism 10.4.2 (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA, USA, accessed on 23 February 2026).

Electronic cigarettes (ECs) are promoted as a safer alternative to traditional cigarettes, yet their impact on immune cells remains incompletely understood. This study investigates the activation of human primary adherent and non-adherent monocytes exposed ex vivo to aerosols from four flavored ECs (classic tobacco, menthol, watermelon, and strawberry) compared to cigarette smoke (CS) and nicotine alone. EC aerosols (ECEs) induced modest cytotoxicity, oxidative stress, and superoxide dismutase activity compared to CS, with high cell response heterogeneity indicating subpopulation-specific effects. Adherent monocytes showed elevated integrin expression (CD11a, CD11b), ICAM-1 (CD54), TNFα, and oxidative stress versus non-adherent cells, amplified by ECE. Dual fluorescence flow cytometry (green DCF for ROS and red for anti-TNFα Ab) revealed shifts toward pro-inflammatory/oxidative quadrants, particularly upper-right high-intensity relatively small subsets with macrophage M1-like CD68 expression in adherent cells. ECEs reduced phagocytosis in adherent monocytes, mimicking CS effects, probably driven by non-nicotine components. Strawberry flavor (ECE 4) elicited the strongest TNFα induction. These findings demonstrate EC-induced subclinical inflammation via selective monocyte activation, potentially contributing to chronic cardiopulmonary risks despite significantly lower overall toxicity than CS.

24 February 2026

The effect of four electronic cigarette extracts: ECE 1 (classic tobacco), ECE 2 (menthol), ECE 3 (watermelon), ECE 4 (strawberry), cigarette smoke (CS) or nicotine (N) on cell viability (A), oxidative stress (B), and superoxide dismutase (SOD, (C)) in human monocytes. The ECE and CS media were prepared as described in Materials and Methods. Cells were kept in ECEs, CS or N-conditioned media for 24 h. Cell viability was tested with the trypan blue exclusion test, intracellular oxidative stress was assessed using fluorescent probe 5-(and-6)-carboxy-2′,7′-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate (carboxy-H2DCFDA) and flow cytometry detection, while specific Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity was assessed with a colorimetric ELISA kit and expressed as units per mg of homogenate protein. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01 for comparisons with the corresponding control cells. ^^ p < 0.01 for comparisons with CS-treated cells. ′ p < 0.05; ″ p < 0.01 for comparisons with N-treated cells.

Marrow-isolated adult multilineage inducible (MIAMI) cells are a subpopulation of mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSC) with enhanced self-renewal, multilineage plasticity, and anti-inflammatory properties, suggesting that their extracellular vesicles (MIA-EVs) may confer advantages over conventional MSC-EVs. MIAMI cells were transcriptionally profiled and expressed regenerative markers, including PDGFRB, CDX2, and TERT. We report the first successful isolation and characterization of MIA-EVs. EVs were isolated by ultracentrifugation and characterized by nanoparticle tracking analysis, transmission electron microscopy, flow cytometry, and surface markers. Cargo analysis identified growth factors (IGFBP-1, HGF, VEGF-D) and 19 highly expressed miRNA targeting survival, regenerative, and immune regulatory pathways. MIA-EVs were efficiently internalized, enhanced keratinocyte wound closure and suppressed osteosarcoma proliferation in vitro. Conditioned MIA-EVs reshaped pathway weighting without altering core regulatory identity, as a conserved 15-miRNA backbone persisted across naïve, irradiated, and cytokine-primed states. In contrast, a 9-miRNA core shared with MSC-EVs defined a basal mesenchymal framework, while MIA-EVs expanded regenerative, survival, and immune network connectivity. Similar to embryonic stem cell (ESC)-EVs, both MIA- and cytokine-primed EVs promoted M2 macrophage polarization, selectively upregulating IL1R2 and PPARG/STAT1, respectively. Meanwhile, MSC-EVs induced heterogeneous responses. These findings establish MIA-EVs as a conditioning-resistant, systems-regulated, cell-free platform with regenerative, immunomodulatory, and cytoprotective potential under hostile microenvironments.

24 February 2026

Schematic representation of the macrophage polarization assay. THP-1 monocytes were cultured under standard conditions (37 °C in a humidified atmosphere with 5% (v/v) CO2) and differentiated into immature M1 macrophages. Following maturation with PMA/IO, cells were treated with no EVs, MIA-EVs, or MIA-TIC-EVs to assess their immunomodulatory effects. Macrophage phenotypes were analyzed by qPCR for M1- and M2-associated gene expression.

Cancer immunotherapy has transformed modern oncology, yet durable responses remain limited for many patients due to immune exclusion, adaptive resistance, and tumor heterogeneity. Oncolytic viruses (OVs) have emerged as a novel class of immunotherapeutics that unify direct tumor cytolysis with stimulation of antitumor immunity. By inducing immunogenic cell death (ICD) and releasing tumor-associated antigens (TAAs), OVs remodel the tumor microenvironment (TME) into an inflamed and immune-permissive niche capable of enabling systemic immune activation. Rapid advances in viral engineering have strengthened the translational potential of OVs through tumor-selective gene deletions, tumor-specific promoters, microRNA-based detargeting, and receptor-retargeting strategies that collectively enhance safety, specificity, and intratumoral propagation. Next-generation OVs are increasingly “armed” with immunostimulatory payloads—including cytokines, chemokines, checkpoint inhibitors, bispecific T-cell engagers, and suicide gene systems—allowing localized immune modulation with reduced systemic toxicity. These innovations have propelled significant clinical progress, exemplified by the approvals of talimogene laherparepvec (T-VEC), G47Δ, and H101, and have driven a surge of combination trials integrating OVs with immune checkpoint blockade, adoptive cell therapies, radiotherapy, and targeted therapies to overcome multilayered tumor immune resistance. Despite this momentum, clinical implementation remains challenged by antiviral immunity, heterogeneous viral distribution, stromal barriers, and dynamic interferon (IFN) signaling in the TME. Emerging delivery approaches, including carrier cell systems, nanotechnology-enabled viral shielding, and synthetic virology platforms, offer promising solutions to these limitations. Oncolytic virotherapy is rapidly evolving into a multifunctional immunotherapeutic platform capable of reshaping antitumor responses at both local and systemic levels. By integrating advanced viral engineering with rational combination strategies and innovative delivery technologies, OVs hold substantial potential to overcome current barriers in cancer immunotherapy and advance precision oncology. Continued translational research will be essential to fully harness their therapeutic impact and broaden their clinical applicability.

24 February 2026

OV-induced immunogenic cell death (ICD) and coordinated activation of innate and adaptive antitumor immunity. Panel (A): Direct Oncolysis. OVs selectively infect tumor cells and replicate intracellularly, leading to direct tumor cell lysis. Viral replication generates PAMPs that are sensed by PRRs, triggering the production of type I IFNs and inflammatory cytokines. OV-mediated lysis further enhances tumor antigen release and contributes to local immune activation. Panel (B): These signals activate innate immune pathways and promote cytokine-driven immunity. NK cells recognize virus-infected tumor cells through the integration of activating and inhibitory receptor signals and contribute to early cytotoxic clearance via cytokine release and granule-mediated tumor cell lysis. Panel (C): cytotoxic T lymphocytes. Activated CD8+ T cells eliminate tumor cells through perforin- and granzyme-mediated killing, while CD4+ T cells provide essential helper functions to sustain and amplify the antitumor response. In parallel, B cells recognize viral antigens and produce antibodies, reinforcing both antiviral and antitumor immunity. Collectively, these adaptive immune mechanisms generate a durable and systemic antitumor response targeting both virus-infected and uninfected tumor cells.

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Cells - ISSN 2073-4409