| Literature DB >> 15872020 |
Ivar Mendez1, Rosario Sanchez-Pernaute, Oliver Cooper, Angel Viñuela, Daniela Ferrari, Lars Björklund, Alain Dagher, Ole Isacson.
Abstract
We report the first post-mortem analysis of two patients with Parkinson's disease who received fetal midbrain transplants as a cell suspension in the striatum, and in one case also in the substantia nigra. These patients had a favourable clinical evolution and positive 18F-fluorodopa PET scans and did not develop motor complications. The surviving transplanted dopamine neurons were positively identified with phenotypic markers of normal control human substantia nigra (n = 3), such as tyrosine hydroxylase, G-protein-coupled inward rectifying current potassium channel type 2 (Girk2) and calbindin. The grafts restored the cell type that provides specific dopaminergic innervation to the most affected striatal regions in the parkinsonian brain. Such transplants were able to densely reinnervate the host putamen with new dopamine fibres. The patients received only 6 months of standard immune suppression, yet by post-mortem analysis 3-4 years after surgery the transplants appeared only mildly immunogenic to the host brain, by analysis of microglial CD45 and CD68 markers. This study demonstrates that, using these methods, dopamine neuronal replacement cell therapy can be beneficial for patients with advanced disease, and that changing technical approaches could have a favourable impact on efficacy and adverse events following neural transplantation.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15872020 PMCID: PMC2610438 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awh510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501