| Literature DB >> 33815100 |
Nadia Sadanandan1, Madeline Saft1, Bella Gonzales-Portillo1, Cesar V Borlongan1.
Abstract
Epilepsy stands as a life-threatening disease that is characterized by unprovoked seizures. However, an important characteristic of epilepsy that needs to be examined is the neuropsychiatric aspect. Epileptic patients endure aggression, depression, and other psychiatric illnesses. Therapies for epilepsy can be divided into two categories: antiepileptic medications and surgical resection. Antiepileptic drugs are used to attenuate heightened neuronal firing and to lessen seizure frequency. Alternatively, surgery can also be conducted to physically cut out the area of the brain that is assumed to be the root cause for the anomalous firing that triggers seizures. While both treatments serve as viable approaches that aim to regulate seizures and ameliorate the neurological detriments spurred by epilepsy, they do not serve to directly counteract epilepsy's neuropsychiatric traits. To address this concern, a potential new treatment involves the use of stem cells. Stem cell therapy has been employed in experimental models of neurological maladies, such as Parkinson's disease, and neuropsychiatric illnesses like depression. Cell-based treatments for epilepsy utilizing stem cells such as neural stem cells (NSCs), mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), and interneuron grafts have been explored in preclinical and clinical settings, highlighting both the acute and chronic stages of epilepsy. However, it is difficult to create an animal model to capitalize on all the components of epilepsy due to the challenges in delineating the neuropsychiatric aspect. Therefore, further preclinical investigation into the safety and efficacy of stem cell therapy in addressing both the neurological and the neuropsychiatric components of epilepsy is warranted in order to optimize cell dosage, delivery, and timing of cell transplantation.Entities:
Keywords: complementary and alternative therapies; epilepsy; neural circuits; neuropharmacology; psychiatric comorbidities; stem cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 33815100 PMCID: PMC8010689 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.596287
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Recent advances supporting the therapeutic use of stem cells in epileptic treatment.
| Type of study (Preclinical/Clinical) | Title, Author, Year | Stem cell variety | Significant findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preclinical |
| MSCs |
|
| Preclinical |
| MSCs | Systematically infused MSCs migrated to the hippocampus of lithium-pilocarpine rats and protected neurons expressing GAD67 and NeuN and resulted in curtailed epileptogenesis and mitigated neurological impairments. Aberrant mossy fiber sprouting in the dentate gyrus also decreased substantially ( |
| Preclinical |
| NESs derived from human embryonic stem cells | NESs designed to lack the ADK gene showed a significant elevation of adenosine production |
| Preclinical |
| NSCs | In pilocarpine, pentylenetetrazole, and picrotoxin rats, NSC intravenous delivery generated antioxidant effects, lowering levels of glutathione, superoxide dismutase and catalase ( |
| Preclinical |
| hiPSC-derived MEG-like precursor cells | In a SE model, the transplanted cells migrated swiftly to the hippocampus and differentiated into fully developed inhibitory interneurons, as well as secreting a wide range of therapeutic neuropeptides. The precursor transplantation resulted in inhibited SRS and improved cognitive, mood, and memory deficits. In addition, interneuron deterioration, abnormal moss fiber sprouting in the dentate gyrus, and anomalous neurogenesis were mitigated ( |
| Preclinical |
| hPSC-derived MGE/CGE like progenitor cells | hPSC-derived MGE/CGE like progenitor cells differentiated into fully developed striatal interneurons |
| Preclinical |
| NSCs and NSC-derived GABAergic neurons | Pharmacoresistant epileptic rats received NSCs and NSC-derived GABAergic neuron transplantation in the hippocampus, which culminated in a repressed frequency of electroencephalography GABAergic neurons demonstrated substantial homing capacity, moving to the injured hippocampus more swiftly than NSCs ( |
| Preclinical |
| MSCs | MSC-Exo administration to LPS-conditioned hippocampal astrocytes attenuated epilepsy-induced alterations in astrocytes, as astrogliosis and neuroinflammation decreased in SE mice following exosomal treatment. The SE mice exhibited ameilorated cognitive impairments, showing improvements in learning and memory ( |
| Preclinical |
| hMSCs | Intranasal injection of EVs harvested from hMSCs into SE rats resulted in hippocampal neuron incorporation of EVs, primarily in the CA1 sector and entorhinal cortex, which are regions that develop significant neurodegeneration post-epilepsy. Furthermore, hMSCs show potential in ameliorating chronic symptoms of epilepsy by combatting neurodegeneration and imparting neuroprotection ( |
| Preclinical |
| Interneuron graft and periventricular endothelial cells | In an experimental model of a psychiatric disease, human periventricular endothelial cells heightened the potency of the interneuron graft by enhancing the migratory abilities of interneurons. As a result, the animal model demonstrated mitigated behavioral impairments ( |
| Preclinical |
| BM-MSCs | FGF-21 overexpression in BM-MSCs protected these cells from glutamate excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, and neuroinflammation, which often result from the onset of epilepsy. Genetically modified BM-MSCs displayed inhibited apoptosis, as caspase pathways induced by hydrogen peroxide and TNF-α were suppressed ( |
| Clinical |
| MSCs | Drug-resistant epileptic patients were treated with either AEDs alone or AEDs in conjunction with one dose of autologous MSCs delivered intravenously and a subsequent intrathecal administration of autologous MSCs that had differentiated into neural cells. Over the course of one year, 3 patients in the MSC group out of 10 became seizure free and 5 patients treated with the MSCs became responsive to AEDs, compared to only 2 of 12 patients in the AED group ( |
| Clinical |
| BMNCs and BM-MSCs | Drug-resistant epileptic patients received both an intrathecal/intravenous injection dose of BMNCs and an intrathecal dose of BMMSCs. In the two-year follow up, subjects demonstrated improved neurological and cognitive function and mitigated seizure frequency. The stem cell treatment was safe, producing no adverse events ( |
| Clinical |
| BMMCs | Autologous BMMCs were intra-arterially delivered to MTLE patients. Over the course of six months, 40% of the patients displayed seizure remission and cognition significantly improved, as memory scores increased. The transplantation was safe and generated no adverse effects ( |
| Clinical |
| ADRCs | Autologous ADRCs were delivered intrathecally to autoimmune refractory epileptic patients three times every three months. In the follow-up, patients showed rehabilitated cognitive, social, and motor impairments. While one patient developed seizure remission, other subjects displayed lower degrees of seizure amelioration or no apparent recovery ( |
FIGURE 1The pathophysiology of epilepsy manifests in both neurological and neuropsychiatric symptoms. Stem cell therapy addresses both sets of symptoms by inducing a multitude of therapeutic mechanisms, primarily through the restoration of GABAergic depletion and production of healthy astrocytes at the injured site. Stem cells also promote normal hippocampal neurogenesis and attenuate oxidative/inflammatory activity, as well as glutamate excitability.