| Literature DB >> 34685493 |
Ruiyi Zhang1,2, Mengzhou Xue2, Voon Wee Yong1.
Abstract
Despite marked advances in surgical techniques and understanding of secondary brain injury mechanisms, the prognosis of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) remains devastating. Harnessing and promoting the regenerative potential of the central nervous system may improve the outcomes of patients with hemorrhagic stroke, but approaches are still in their infancy. In this review, we discuss the regenerative phenomena occurring in animal models and human ICH, provide results related to cellular and molecular mechanisms of the repair process including by microglia, and review potential methods to promote tissue regeneration in ICH. We aim to stimulate research involving tissue restoration after ICH.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; biomaterial; drug therapy; intracerebral hemorrhage; neurogenesis; neuroinflammation; rehabilitation; remyelination; stem cells; tissue regeneration
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34685493 PMCID: PMC8534252 DOI: 10.3390/cells10102513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Signals from tissue damage and inflammatory cells may trigger the process of repair. Neural precursor cells (NPCs) proliferate from SVZ and migrate to the perihematomal area and differentiate into neurons and glia, contributing to brain restoration. However, most of these NPCs could not survive more than 3 weeks due to extensive apoptosis. Moreover, the proliferated Olig2+ cells were preferentially gathered inside the white matter bundles, although there are no data on whether these newly formed oligodendrocytes contribute to subsequent remyelination. Inflammatory products from resident and infiltrated immune cells promote or hinder tissue recovery according to their phenotypes.
Figure 2Some molecules including thrombin, MMP-9, HMGB1, TLR4, show divergent effects on post-ICH repair. They tend towards causing pathological changes such as brain edema, BBB disruption, neuronal degeneration, or death in the early phase after ICH, but convert to beneficial regenerative processes by increasing DCX+ cells, promoting endothelial proliferation, pericyte coverage, and stimulating trophic factors at the later stage after ICH. Moreover, the expression of STAT3 and Nogo-A after experimental ICH is observed to inhibit neurogenesis, while Notch1 and the generation of lactate can promote this process.
Potential strategies to promote tissue regeneration after intracerebral hemorrhage.
| Approaches | Possible Benefits | |
|---|---|---|
| Medications | Statins | Neurogenesis, angiogenesis, phagocytosis |
| Minocycline | “M2” polarization, neurogenesis | |
| Fingolimod/Siponimod | Neurogenesis, remyelination | |
| Lithium | Trophic factors, white matter repair | |
| CD47 antibody | Hematoma clearance | |
| Stem cells | BM-MSCs | Axonal regeneration, BBB reconstruction |
| Muse cells | Cell replacement of neurons | |
| ADSCs | Neuron-like differentiation, VEGF | |
| UCSCs | Neurogenesis, angiogenesis, remyelination | |
| Exosomes | Remyelination, axonal sprouting, neurogenesis | |
| Biomaterials | Hydrogel | Regulatory polarization, neurogenesis |
| SAPNS | Oligodendrogenesis, remyelination | |
| Rehabilitation | Skilled reach training | Dendritic reorganization, BDNF |
| Enriched environment | Dendritic length | |
| Acrobatic training | Neuronal activity, synaptic remodeling | |
| Aerobic training | Dendritic length and complexity |