| Literature DB >> 31244609 |
Hiroyuki Katoh1,2, Kazuya Yokota1,3, Michael G Fehlings1,4,5,6.
Abstract
Significant progress has been made in the treatment of spinal cord injury (SCI). Advances in post-trauma management and intensive rehabilitation have significantly improved the prognosis of SCI and converted what was once an "ailment not to be treated" into a survivable injury, but the cold hard fact is that we still do not have a validated method to improve the paralysis of SCI. The irreversible functional impairment of the injured spinal cord is caused by the disruption of neuronal transduction across the injury lesion, which is brought about by demyelination, axonal degeneration, and loss of synapses. Furthermore, refractory substrates generated in the injured spinal cord inhibit spontaneous recovery. The discovery of the regenerative capability of central nervous system neurons in the proper environment and the verification of neural stem cells in the spinal cord once incited hope that a cure for SCI was on the horizon. That hope was gradually replaced with mounting frustration when neuroprotective drugs, cell transplantation, and strategies to enhance remyelination, axonal regeneration, and neuronal plasticity demonstrated significant improvement in animal models of SCI but did not translate into a cure in human patients. However, recent advances in SCI research have greatly increased our understanding of the fundamental processes underlying SCI and fostered increasing optimism that these multiple treatment strategies are finally coming together to bring about a new era in which we will be able to propose encouraging therapies that will lead to appreciable improvements in SCI patients. In this review, we outline the pathophysiology of SCI that makes the spinal cord refractory to regeneration and discuss the research that has been done with cell replacement and biomaterial implantation strategies, both by itself and as a combined treatment. We will focus on the capacity of these strategies to facilitate the regeneration of neural connectivity necessary to achieve meaningful functional recovery after SCI.Entities:
Keywords: biomaterials; central nervous system; regeneration; stem cell transplantation; traumatic spinal cord injury
Year: 2019 PMID: 31244609 PMCID: PMC6563678 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2019.00248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
FIGURE 1Pathophysiology of spinal cord injury (SCI). (A) The diagram shows the pathophysiological events occurring around the lesion site during the acute to subacute phase of SCI. The primary and secondary injury mechanisms lead to inflammation, hemorrhage, apoptosis, and necrosis. Resident neurons, oligodendrocytes, and astrocytes near the lesion are forced into apoptosis or necrosis, resulting in anterograde (Wallerian degeneration) and retrograde (axonal dieback) axonal degeneration. Reactive astrocytes and other glial cells secrete chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs), which acts as a physical and chemical barrier that impedes endogenous tissue repair processes such as axonal sprouting and synaptic reorganization. (B) The diagram shows the pathophysiological events in the chronic phase of SCI. In the epicenter of the lesion, a cavitation has occurred that is surrounded by connective scar tissues and contains cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). The phenotype of reactive astrocytes has changed into scar-forming astrocytes that impede regenerating axons from crossing the lesion. Some inflammatory immune cells remain around the lesion even in the chronic phase of SCI.
FIGURE 2Components of spinal cord connectivity. The diagram shows the simplified components of spinal connectivity composed of an upper motor neuron, a lower motor neuron, and targeted muscle fibers. Neurons have cell bodies, dendrites that receive signals, and axons that transmit signals. At the base of the axon is the axon hillock where the signal transmission is initiated, and the axon divides at its end into several branches, each of which ends in synaptic terminals. The site of interactive communication between a transmitting cell (a presynaptic upper motor neuron) and a receiving one (a postsynaptic lower motor neuron) is called the synapse. The axons of most neurons are covered with a lipid layer knows as the myelin sheath, which insulates axons and speeds up transmission of action potentials through the axon. The axon terminals at a synapse contain tiny vesicles filled with chemicals called neurotransmitters. The lower motor neurons take the impulse to the effector (muscle fibers) and control the coordination of muscle contraction.
FIGURE 3Potential mechanisms of spinal cord repair by stem cell transplantation. The diagram shows potential mechanisms of regeneration brought about by stem cell transplantation. The transplanted stem cells differentiate into neural cells of the three lineages: neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes (shown in green). The transplanted stem cells and differentiated cells secrete neurotrophic factors that reduce inflammation, degrade CSPGs, and promote endogenous tissue repair. Differentiated oligodendrocytes remyelinate denuded axons. The grafted neurons form synapses with propriospinal neurons and lumbar motor neurons, which reorganize the neuronal circuits by forming de novo synaptic connectivity between host and grafted neurons. The regenerated neuronal circuits bridge the lesion by creating a detour route that passes through areas more favorable to regenerating axons. Transplant-derived interneurons indirectly connect the host injured neural tracts through the propriospinal circuits, whereas transplant-derived neurons participate in the regeneration of the injured corticospinal tract (CST) and directly activate muscle contraction.
Selected studies using a combinatorial therapy comprised of neural stem cell transplantation with a biomaterial containing neuroprotective agents.
| Koffler | 2019 | Rat spinal cord-derived NSPCs | 3D biomimetic hydrogel scaffolds including GelMa, PEGDA, and LAP | Growth factor cocktail (BDNF, VEGF, bFGF, calpain inhibitor) | T3 complete transection, Fischer rats | The injured host axons regenerated into 3D biomimetic scaffolds and synapsed onto NSPCs implanted into the device, and implanted NSPCs extended axons out of the scaffold and into the host spinal cord below the injury to restore synaptic transmission and significantly improve functional outcomes. |
| Rosenzweig | 2018 | Human spinal cord-derived NSPCs | Fibrin matrix | Growth factor cocktail (BDNF, NT-3, GDNF, EGF, bFGF, aFGF, HGF, IGF-1, VEGF, PDGF-AA, calpain inhibitor) | C7 right lateral hemisection, rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) | Grafted axons extended through host white matter and synapsed in distal gray matter. Grafts gradually matured over 9 months and improved forelimb function beginning several months after grafting. |
| Nori | 2018 | Human directly reprogrammed drOPCs | Thiolated methylcellulose modified with SH3 domain binding peptides | Recombinant ChABC-SH3 fusion protein | T7 clip injury, RNU (athymic nude) rats | This combinatorial therapy increased long-term survival of drOPCs around lesion epicenter and facilitated greater oligodendrocyte differentiation, which led to remyelination of the spared axons by engrafted drOPCs and enhanced synaptic connectivity with anterior horn cells, leading to neurobehavioral recovery. |
| Kadoya | 2016 | Rat spinal cord-derived NSPCs | Fibrin matrix | Growth factor cocktail (BDNF, NT-3, PDGF-AA, IGF-1, EGF, bFDF, aFGF, GDNF, HGF, calpain inhibitor) | T3 complete transection and C4 (CST) lesion, Fischer rats | Grafted cells showed robust corticospinal axon regeneration that formed functional synapses and led to improvement in skilled forelimb function. |
| Führmann | 2016 | Human iPSC-derived OPCs | Hydrogel blend of hyaluronan and methylcellulose (HAMC) | RGD (arginine-glycine-aspartic acid) peptide, PDGF-A | T2 clip injury, Sprague Dawley rats | HAMC hydrogel, modified with a RGD peptide and PDGF-A, promoted early survival and integration of grafted cells. Teratoma formation was attenuated when cells were transplanted in the hydrogel, where most cells differentiated to a glial phenotype. |
| Mothe | 2013 | Rat brain-derived NSPCs | Hydrogel blend of hyaluronan and methylcellulose (HAMC) | Recombinant PDGF-A (rPDGF-A) | T2 clip injury, Wistar rats | SCI rats transplanted with NSPCs in HAMC-rPDGF-A showed improved behavioral recovery compared to rats transplanted with NSPCs in media. NSPC/HAMC-rPDGF-A group had significantly reduced cavitation, improved graft survival, increased oligodendrocytic differentiation, and increased sparing of perilesional host oligodendrocytes and neurons. |
| Li | 2013 | Rat brain-derived NSPCs | Collagen scaffolds | EGFR neutralizing antibody | T13-L2 lateral hemisection, Sprague Dawley rats | The scaffold loaded with the EGFR antibody neutralized the negative effects of myelin proteins and directed the differentiation of transplanted NSPCs to a neuronal lineage, which promoted functional recovery after SCI. |
FIGURE 4Combinatorial treatment of stem cells and biomaterials containing ChABC elicits remyelination and synaptic reorganization. (A,B) Representative images of axial (A) and sagittal (B) sections stained for STEM121 (a specific marker for human cytoplasmic protein; green), MBP (red), and NF200 (magenta). Many STEM121-positive/MBP-positive graft-derived myelin sheathes were observed around NF200-positive host axons. (C) Immunoelectron microscopy images show synapses formed between host and graft-derived neurons after the combinatorial treatment. Presynaptic and postsynaptic structures indicate transmission from host neurons to graft-derived neuron (left image), and from graft-derived neurons to host neurons (right image). Annotated (H) indicates host neurons, and (G) indicates graft-derived neurons. Arrowheads indicate postsynaptic density. Figure altered with permission from Nori et al. (2018). Human oligodendrogenic neural progenitor cells delivered with chondroitinase ABC facilitate functional repair of chronic spinal cord injury (2018).