| Literature DB >> 32317938 |
Tuo Yang1,2, YuJuan Dai2, Gang Chen3,4, ShuSen Cui1.
Abstract
Recovery from spinal cord injury (SCI) remains an unsolved problem. As a major component of the SCI lesion, the glial scar is primarily composed of scar-forming astrocytes and plays a crucial role in spinal cord regeneration. In recent years, it has become increasingly accepted that the glial scar plays a dual role in SCI recovery. However, the underlying mechanisms of this dual role are complex and need further clarification. This dual role also makes it difficult to manipulate the glial scar for therapeutic purposes. Here, we briefly discuss glial scar formation and some representative components associated with scar-forming astrocytes. Then, we analyze the dual role of the glial scar in a dynamic perspective with special attention to scar-forming astrocytes to explore the underlying mechanisms of this dual role. Finally, taking the dual role of the glial scar into account, we provide several pieces of advice on novel therapeutic strategies targeting the glial scar and scar-forming astrocytes.Entities:
Keywords: astrocyte; glial scar; regeneration; scar-forming astrocyte; spinal cord injury
Year: 2020 PMID: 32317938 PMCID: PMC7147295 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2020.00078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Recent studies demonstrating the roles of the glial scar in SCI.
| Role of the glial scar in SCI | SCI model | Intervention | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aids regeneration | T10 forceps crush injury (mice) | Inhibition of the glial scar by STAT3 knockout, TK/GCV, and diphtheria toxin-mediated astrocyte ablation | Failed to result in spontaneous axonal regrowth | Anderson et al. ( |
| T8 forceps crush injury (mice) | Selective ablation of the glial scar by the HSV-TK/GCV system | Failed to improve spontaneous functional recovery | Gu et al. ( | |
| C5 contusion (mice) | Glial scar disruption by NG2 ablation | Impaired forelimb locomotion | Hesp et al. ( | |
| Restricts inflammatory and fibrotic cells | L1/L2 forceps crush injury (mice) | Selective deletion of STAT3 | Increased the spread of inflammatory and fibrotic cells; increased neuronal loss | Wanner et al. ( |
| T10 aneurysm clip crush injury (mice) | Conditional ablation of astrocytic BMPR1a | Reduced astrocytic hypertrophy, increased inflammatory infiltration and reduced axon density | Sahni et al. ( | |
| L1/L2 longitudinal stab injury and moderate crush injury | Ablation of reactive astrocytes by the HSV-TK/GCV system | Failure of blood-brain barrier repair, leukocyte infiltration, local tissue disruption, severe demyelination, neuronal and oligodendrocyte death and pronounced motor deficits | Faulkner et al. ( | |
| Provides permissive bridges for axonal regeneration | T8 forceps crush injury (mice) | shRNA-mediated PTEN suppression | Most axons regrew along the astrocytic bridge | Zukor et al. ( |
| Induces A1 astrocytes, which kill neurons and mature oligodendrocytes | T10 weight-drop impact injury (rats) | Notch signaling pathway blockage | Suppresses A1 astrocyte transition | Qian et al. ( |
| T10 impactor contusion injury (rats) | Intravenous injection of mesenchymal stem cells or their exosomes | Decreased lesion area and improved motor function | Wang L. et al. ( | |
| Inhibits axonal regeneration | T10 impactor contusion injury (mice) | Reduction in glial scar formation through the pharmacological blockade of astrocytic type I collagen interaction | Improved axonal regeneration and functional recovery | Hara et al. ( |
| Produces CSPGs to inhibit spinal cord regeneration | T10 impactor contusion injury (mice) | Chondroitin sulphate N-acetylgalactosaminyl-transferase-1 gene knockout | Improved recovery compared to that of chondroitinase ABC-treated mice and wild-type mice | Takeuchi et al. ( |
| T8 impactor contusion injury (rats) | CSPG receptor blockade by a CSPG receptor PTPσ mimetic peptide | Facilitated functional recovery | Lang et al. ( | |
| C7 hemisection (rhesus monkeys) | Intraparenchymal injections of chondroitinase | Improved hand function | Rosenzweig et al. ( | |
| C2 hemisection (rats) | A combined chondroitinase ABC and intermittent hypoxia conditioning treatment | Led to a rapid and robust respiratory and motor recovery | Warren et al. ( | |
| T8 hemisection (rats) | Decreasing CSPGs and fibrotic scarring by microtube stabilization | Promoted axonal regeneration | Hellal et al. ( |
Figure 1Scar-forming astrocyte transformation and the dual role of the glial scar and scar-forming astrocytes in spinal cord injury (SCI). ① In the acute and subacute phases of SCI, the glial scar and scar-forming astrocytes not only restrict the spread of inflammation but also regulate inflammation through interactions with innate and peripheral immune cells. ② Microglia-mediated A1 phenotypic changes result in neuronal and mature oligodendrocytic death through the release of soluble toxins. ③ The glial scar inhibits spinal cord regeneration through physical obstruction and the release of inhibitory molecules. ④ In the chronic phase, the glial scar persistently limits the fibrotic tissue and macrophages. Scar-forming astrocytes may serve as bridges for axonal growth under certain conditions.