| Literature DB >> 33889578 |
Sara Palma-Tortosa1, Berta Coll-San Martin2,3, Zaal Kokaia1, Daniel Tornero2,3.
Abstract
Stem cell therapy using human skin-derived neural precursors holds much promise for the treatment of stroke patients. Two main mechanisms have been proposed to give rise to the improved recovery in animal models of stroke after transplantation of these cells. First, the so called by-stander effect, which could modulate the environment during early phases after brain tissue damage, resulting in moderate improvements in the outcome of the insult. Second, the neuronal replacement and functional integration of grafted cells into the impaired brain circuitry, which will result in optimum long-term structural and functional repair. Recently developed sophisticated research tools like optogenetic control of neuronal activity and rabies virus monosynaptic tracing, among others, have made it possible to provide solid evidence about the functional integration of grafted cells and its contribution to improved recovery in animal models of brain damage. Moreover, previous clinical trials in patients with Parkinson's Disease represent a proof of principle that stem cell-based neuronal replacement could work in humans. Our studies with in vivo and ex vivo transplantation of human skin-derived cells neurons in animal model of stroke and organotypic cultures of adult human cortex, respectively, also support the hypothesis that human somatic cells reprogrammed into neurons can get integrated in the human lesioned neuronal circuitry. In the present short review, we summarized our data and recent studies from other groups supporting the above hypothesis and opening new avenues for development of the future clinical applications.Entities:
Keywords: cell replacement; functional integration; neural stem cells; stem cell therapy; stroke
Year: 2021 PMID: 33889578 PMCID: PMC8056014 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.662636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Schematic summary of the technological approaches used to study the functional connectivity between grafted and host neurons. Transplanted cells (colored in green) are located adjacent to the cortical ischemic lesion. For clarity and as an example, thalamo-cortical afferent projections to the graft and transcallosal projections from graft to host cortical neurons in the contralateral hemisphere are presented. Different techniques are distributed in the areas of the brain where they are applied: (A) contralateral cortex, (B) transplant, (C) thalamus. TX, transplant; CC, corpus callosum.
Summary of the studies exploring cell replacement occurrence in stem cell therapy for brain damage (organized in chronological order).
| References | Cell source | Damage model | Specie | Injection site | Description |
| Mouse ESC | Cortical ablation with ibotenic acid | Mouse | Visual cortex | Appropriate cortical area identity of grafted neurons is essential for correct reconstruction of adult damaged cortical circuitry | |
| Mouse Fetal | Cortical ablation with chlorine e6 | Mouse | Visual cortex | Neocortical grafted cells integrate structurally and functionally into the adult cortical circuitry | |
| Human ESC | No lesion | Mouse | Hippocampus and Striatum | Innervation network developed by grafted cells is similar to the one generated by endogenous neurons, being determinant the area where the cells are transplanted | |
| Human iPSC | Cortical ischemic stroke | Rat | Sensorimotor cortex | Grafted neurons integrate in stroke-injured brain and receive functional afferent inputs from host neurons that are activated by sensory stimuli | |
| Human ESC | Focal Ischemia with endothelin-1 | Rat | Sensorimotor cortex | Hydrogels fabricated with peptides for laminin-derived epitope improve differentiation and enhance synaptic connectivity of human ESC-derived cortical neurons grafted after stroke | |
| Human ESC | Cortical ischemic stroke | Mouse | Sensorimotor cortex | Grafted neurons stabilize stroke-damaged functional neuronal networks through paracrine effects | |
| Mouse ESC | No lesion/Ischemic lesion | Mouse | Cortex and Hippocampus | Identity of grafted neuronal precursors determine its connectivity and integration after transplantation in cortex or striatum | |
| Mouse ESC | Cortical ablation with ibotenic acid | Mouse | Visual cortex | Grafted neurons with visual identity display similar functional and morphological features from the host neurons and establish a similar projection pattern | |
| Human ESC | Focal Ischemia with endothelin-1 | Rat | Sensorimotor cortex | Peptide-based hydrogels loaded with BDNF increase long-term survival and vascularization of grafted ESC-derived cortical neurons while reducing secondary degeneration | |
| Human iPSC | No lesion | Mouse | Cortex | ||
| Mouse iPSC | Cortical ischemic stroke | Mouse | Sensorimotor cortex | Optochemogenetic stimulation of grafted cells improve rescue of neural network lost connectivity and function after stroke | |
| Human ESC | No lesion | Mouse | Lateral ventricles | Graft-derived cortical neurons integrate in host neuronal network and combine intrinsic human development with host-like activity pattern | |
| Human iPSC | Cortical ischemic stroke | Rat | Sensorimotor cortex | Graft-derived cortical neurons send transcallosal projections to the contralateral hemisphere and generate functional synapses with host neurons contributing to behavioral improvements | |
| Rat Fetal | Cortical ablation with DT system | Rat | Sensorimotor cortex | Graft-derived neurons form vascularized clusters that integrate into host circuitry and survive long-term, leading to functional recovery | |
| Human ESC | Parkinson Disease | Mouse | Substantia nigra/Striatum | Graft-derived neurons resemble host ones and its projection pattern depends on intrinsic cell properties. These cells repair nigro-striatal lesioned circuit restoring circuit functionality |