| Literature DB >> 24574954 |
John W Cave1, Meng Wang1, Harriet Baker1.
Abstract
Clinical trials engrafting human fetal ventral mesencephalic tissue have demonstrated, in principle, that cell replacement therapy provides substantial long-lasting improvement of motor impairments generated by Parkinson's Disease (PD). The use of fetal tissue is not practical for widespread clinical implementation of this therapy, but stem cells are a promising alternative source for obtaining replacement cells. The ideal stem cell source has yet to be established and, in this review, we discuss the potential of neural stem cells in the adult subventricular zone (SVZ) as an autologous source of replacement cells. We identify three key challenges for further developing this potential source of replacement cells: (1) improving survival of transplanted cells, (2) suppressing glial progenitor proliferation and survival, and (3) developing methods to efficiently produce dopaminergic neurons. Subventricular neural stem cells naturally produce a dopaminergic interneuron phenotype that has an apparent lack of vulnerability to PD-mediated degeneration. We also discuss whether olfactory bulb dopaminergic neurons derived from adult SVZ neural stem cells are a suitable source for cell replacement strategies.Entities:
Keywords: adult neurogenesis; cell replacement therapy; dopaminergic; neural stem cells; olfactory bulb; subventricular zone
Year: 2014 PMID: 24574954 PMCID: PMC3918650 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Summary of studies transplanting adult SVZ-derived cells into the adult striatum.
| Lois and Alvarez-Buylla, | ~100 μm diameter explants | NSE-LacZ mice | None | Wild-type mice | 30 days | No migration of surviving cells outside of transplantation site |
| Herrera et al., | ~150 μm diameter explants | NSE-LacZ mice | None | Mice with kainic acid lesions | 2, 4, 6, and 8 weeks | Limited migration of transplanted cells Vast majority of surviving NSE-LacZ expressing cells were astrocytes |
| Zhang et al., | Dissociated cell suspensions | Wild-type rat | Neural progenitor cells cultured for 8 days in media with FGF2, horse and calf serum; cells were labeled with either BrdU or DiO | Wild-type rats | 7 and 28 days | Substantial migration away from transplantation site Majority of BrdU and DiO labeled cells expressed either MAP2 or NeuN, few expressed GFAP |
| Meissner et al., | Neurosphere suspensions | βActin-CMV-GFP mice | Neurospheres were cultured for 5 passages in the presence of EGF and FGF2 | Mice with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine OHDA lesions | 1 month | Low survival rate of transplanted cells ~7% and ~2% of surviving cells expressed TH Improved motor performance to apomorphine and amphetamine challenges |
| Richardson et al., | Dissociated cell suspensions | Wild-type rat | Neural progenitor cells isolated by a Percoll gradient, cultured for 1 week in media containing FGF2, then 6 days in media containing retinoic acid without FGF2; cells were labeled with BrdU | Rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine OHDA lesions | 2 weeks | Many surviving transplanted cells maintain Nestin expression, but none expressed NeuN Improved motor performance to amphetamine challenge |
| Seidenfaden et al., | ~100 μm diameter explants | βActin-CMV-GFP mice | None | Wild-type mice | 3 weeks and 6 months | Limited migration and low survival rate of transplanted cells Most surviving cells expressed glial marker genes |
| Chen et al., | Neurosphere suspensions | Wild-type rat | Neural progenitor cells isolated by a Percoll gradient protocol, cultured for 2 weeks in media containing EGF and FGF2; cells were labeled with BrdU | Wild-type rat | 6 weeks | Substantial migration away from transplantation site Most surviving cells expressed GFAP and none expressed NeuN |
| Chen et al., | Neurosphere suspensions | Wild-type rat | Neural progenitor cells isolated by a Percoll gradient protocol, cultured for 2 weeks in media containing EGF and FGF2; cells were labeled with BrdU | Rats transduced with AAV1/2 vectors to over-express either BDNF or FGF2 in the striatum | 6 and 12 weeks | AAV1/2-FGF2 improved survival of transplanted cells Most surviving transplanted cells expressed glial marker genes AAV1/2-BDNF increased percentage of surviving cells expressing NeuN |
| Shim et al., | Dissociated cell suspensions | Wild-type rat | Neurospheres were cultured in media containing EGF, FGF2, and PDGF for over 2 months; retroviral transduction to over-express Nurr1 and Mash1 | Rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine OHDA lesions | 2, 4, and 6 weeks | Substantial number of surviving transplanted cells expressed MAP2, TH and VMAT2 Improved motor performance to amphetamine challenge |
| Deleidi et al., | Dissociated cell suspensions | rTA/Oct4 mice | Neurospheres were expanded for 14 days before being converted to induced pluripotent stem cells and then differentiated via 5 stage protocol; SSEA1+ cells were removed by cell sorting prior to transplantation | Rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine OHDA lesions | 4, 6, and 8 weeks | Substantial number of surviving transplanted cells express TH Improved motor performance to apomorphine and amphetamine challenges |