Transplanted fetal striatum in Huntington's disease: Phenotypic development and lack of pathology
- 5 December 2000
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 97 (25) , 13877-13882
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.97.25.13877
Abstract
Neural and stem cell transplantation is emerging as a potential treatment for neurodegenerative diseases. Transplantation of specific committed neuroblasts (fetal neurons) to the adult brain provides such scientific exploration of these new potential therapies. Huntington's disease (HD) is a fatal, incurable autosomal dominant (CAG repeat expansion of huntingtin protein) neurodegenerative disorder with primary neuronal pathology within the caudate-putamen (striatum). In a clinical trial of human fetal striatal tissue transplantation, one patient died 18 months after transplantation from cardiovascular disease, and postmortem histological analysis demonstrated surviving transplanted cells with typical morphology of the developing striatum. Selective markers of both striatal projection and interneurons such as dopamine and c-AMP-related phosphoprotein, calretinin, acetylcholinesterase, choline acetyltransferase, tyrosine hydroxylase, calbindin, enkephalin, and substance P showed positive transplant regions clearly innervated by host tyrosine hydroxylase fibers. There was no histological evidence of immune rejection including microglia and macrophages. Notably, neuronal protein aggregates of mutated huntingtin, which is typical HD neuropathology, were not found within the transplanted fetal tissue. Thus, although there is a genetically predetermined process causing neuronal death within the HD striatum, implanted fetal neural cells lacking the mutant HD gene may be able to replace damaged host neurons and reconstitute damaged neuronal connections. This study demonstrates that grafts derived from human fetal striatal tissue can survive, develop, and are unaffected by the disease process, at least for 18 months, after transplantation into a patient with HD.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Chemical phenotype of calretinin interneurons in the human striatumSynapse, 1998
- Cellular Delivery of CNTF but not NT-4/5 Prevents Degeneration of Striatal Neurons in a Rodent Model of Huntington's DiseaseCell Transplantation, 1998
- Aggregation of Huntingtin in Neuronal Intranuclear Inclusions and Dystrophic Neurites in BrainScience, 1997
- Striatal interneurones: chemical, physiological and morphological characterizationTrends in Neurosciences, 1995
- Development of the human striatum: Implications for fetal striatal transplantation in the treatment of Huntington's diseaseCell Transplantation, 1995
- Transplanted xenogeneic neural cells in neurodegenerative disease models exhibit remarkable axonal target specificity and distinct growth patterns of glial and axonal fibresNature Medicine, 1995
- Bilateral fetal nigral transplantation into the postcommissural putamen in Parkinson's diseaseAnnals of Neurology, 1995
- The lateral ganglionic eminence is the origin of cells committed to striatal phenotypes: neural transplantation and developmental evidenceBrain Research, 1994
- A new polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay for the trinucleotide repeat that is unstable and expanded on Huntington's disease chromosomesMolecular and Cellular Probes, 1993
- Anatomy and connectivity of intrastriatal striatal transplantsProgress in Neurobiology, 1992