| Literature DB >> 29997478 |
Qian Zhu1, Janice R Naegele2, Sangmi Chung1.
Abstract
Epilepsy is a severe neurological disease affecting more than 70 million people worldwide that is characterized by unpredictable and abnormal electrical discharges resulting in recurrent seizures. Although antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are the mainstay of epilepsy treatment for seizure control, about one third of patients with epilepsy suffer from intractable seizures that are unresponsive to AEDs. Furthermore, the patients that respond to AEDs typically experience adverse systemic side effects, underscoring the urgent need to develop new therapies that target epileptic foci rather than more systemic interventions. Neurosurgical removal of affected brain tissues or implanting neurostimulator devices are effective options only for a fraction of patients with drug-refractory seizures, so it is imperative to develop treatments that are more generally applicable and restorative in nature. Considering the abnormalities of GABAergic inhibitory interneurons in epileptic brain tissues, one strategy with considerable promise is to restore normal circuit function by transplanting GABAergic interneurons/progenitors into the seizure focus. In this review, we focus on recent studies of cortical GABAergic interneuron transplantation to treat epilepsy and discuss critical issues in moving this promising experimental therapeutic treatment into clinic.Entities:
Keywords: GABAergic interneurons; animal models; cell transplantation; differentiation; human pluripotent stem cells; intractable epilepsy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29997478 PMCID: PMC6028694 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2018.00167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
A summary of GABAergic interneuron/progenitor transplantation in animal models of epilepsy.
| Reference | Cell source | Cell type | Animal models of epilepsy | Location and timing of transplantation | Results of transplantation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | MGE cells from E13.5 GFP+ transgenic mice | Bilateral transplantation into deep layers of cortex in mouse pups (P1-P3) | • MGE progenitors generated multiple GABAergic interneuron subtypes in the brain | |||
| • The frequency and duration of spontaneous seizures was reduced after MGE cell grafting | ||||||
| Mouse | MGE cells from mouse embryos | An acute epileptic seizure model induced by MES 2 months after transplantation | Bilateral transplantation into the neocortex of neonatal normal mice | • The frequency and duration of tonic seizures were reduced in the MGE group when compared to the control group | ||
| • The mortality rate was also significantly decreased in the MGE group, compared to the control group | ||||||
| • The grafted MGE cells migrated and differentiated into GABAergic interneurons | ||||||
| Mouse | Mouse embryonic stem cell-derived neural progenitors | Pilocarpine-induced TLE model in adult mice | Bilateral transplantation into the hilus of the DG of mice 2 weeks following SE | • The majority of the grafted cells differentiated into multiple subtypes of GABAergic interneurons | ||
| • Extensive axonal projections were formed in the brain, although marked suppression of MFS was not observed | ||||||
| • The majority of the transplanted cells exhibited electrophysiological properties, morphologies and firing patterns consistent with endogenous hippocampal interneurons | ||||||
| • The transplanted cells were functionally integrated into the host brain circuitry | ||||||
| Mouse | MGE cells from E13.5 GFP+ mouse embryos | Pilocarpine-induced TLE model in adult mice (P51) | Bilateral injection of MGE cells into the hippocampus or amygdala of adult mice (P60-76) | In the hippocampus | In the amygdala | |
| • MGE progenitors dispersed and differentiated into functionally integrated mature GABAergic interneurons | • MGE progenitors were present in the basal and lateral nuclei | |||||
| • The occurrence of electrographic seizures was reduced | • Seizure frequency was not altered | |||||
| • Neurobehavioral comorbidities including aggressive reaction to handling, hyperactivity and spatial learning were restored | • Only the hyperactivity deficit was reversed. Other behavior deficits were not improved | |||||
| Mouse | MGE cells from E 13.5 VGAT-Venus or VGAT-ChR2-EYPF transgenic embryos | Pilocarpine-induced TLE model in adult mice | Bilateral injections into the hilus of the DG or the LEC of mice 2 weeks following SE | • The DG transplant group showed significantly fewer generalized seizures than controls, based on EEG recordings and behavioral assessment. | ||
| • MFS in the vicinity of MGE grafts in the dorsal hippocampus was significantly reduced in the DG transplant group, compared with the media control group and the LEC transplant group | ||||||
| • MGE cells differentiated into different subtypes of GABAergic interneurons | ||||||
| • Synaptic inhibition onto granule cells was increased in the DG transplant group compared to the media control group and the dead cell transplant group | ||||||
| • Extensive inhibitory synaptic network with granule cells was established, and these new synapses were shown by optogenetics to provide functional synaptic inhibition of granule cells | ||||||
| Mouse | MGE cells from E12.5 GFP mice | A Stargazer mouse model of AE | Bilateral injection into the occipital cortices of P0 mice | • The frequency and duration of AE episodes were reduced and mortality was lowered after transplantation of MGE cells | ||
| • Despite a low yield of integration after grafting, 93 ± 4% of the integrated cells were GABAergic | ||||||
| • The defective cortical network activity was significantly altered by MGE grafting | ||||||
| Rat | Fetal striatal GABAergic neurons from E14 rats | A kindling model of TLE by electrical stimulation from a bipolar electrode implanted in the basolateral amygdala | Bilateral transplantation into the SN of rats after seven ADT determinations | • The implanted neurons survived up at least to the end of the experiments | ||
| • A significant increase in ADT was observed in the rats with GABAergic grafts in the SN, which also displayed a marked reduction in the severity of seizures | ||||||
| • This anticonvulsant effect did not relate to any adverse effects although it was not long-lasting | ||||||
| Rat | Striatal progenitors from E15 rat embryo LGE | A SE model of chronic TLE in adult rats induced by graded intraperitoneal injections of kainic acid | Bilateral transplantation of striatal progenitors into hippocampus at 4 days post-SE after treatment with FGF-2 and caspase inhibitor. | • 9–12 months after grafting, the frequency of spontaneous recurrent motor seizures was 67–89% less than epilepsy-only and sham grafting control groups | ||
| • Graft cell survival equivalent to 33% of transplanted cells | ||||||
| • ∼69% of the grafted cells differentiated into various subclasses of GABAergic neurons | ||||||
| • No effects on aberrant MFS. | ||||||
| Rat | Genetically engineered GABA-producing cell lines: | An acute seizure model by using the timed intravenous PTZ infusion seizure test. | Bilateral and unilateral transplantation into the STN of rats | • Viable transplanted cells were visible to the end of the experiments | ||
| (1) Immortalized GABAergic cells (M213-2O) | PTZ seizure thresholds were determined at 2–3 days before transplantation, and different time points after transplantation (10–11 days, 3 weeks, and 5 weeks). | • The anticonvulsant effects could be induced by bilateral/unilateral transplantation of GABA-producing cells into the STN, while such effects were not able to be induced by transplantation of control cells or grafting outside the STN | ||||
| (2) M213-2O hGAD67 cells | • Grafting into STN caused more pronounced anticonvulsant effects than grafting into SNr | |||||
| Human | MGE cells derived from hESCs | Pilocarpine-induced TLE model | Bilateral transplantation of MGE cells into the hippocampus of TLE mice 2–4 weeks after SE | • The transplanted cells displaying extensive migration developed into functional GABAergic interneurons that integrated into the neural circuitry of host brain | ||
| • The grafted cells presented presynaptic machinery for releasing GABA to inhibit host neurons as well as postsynaptic machinery for receiving excitatory synaptic inputs from host neurons in the hippocampus | ||||||
| • The seizure frequency was significantly reduced following hESC derived-MGE cell transplantation | ||||||
| • Behavioral abnormalities such as hyperactivity, aggressiveness and cognitive deficits were alleviated after MGE cell grafting | ||||||