Transplanted xenogeneic neural cells in neurodegenerative disease models exhibit remarkable axonal target specificity and distinct growth patterns of glial and axonal fibres
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Medicine
- Vol. 1 (11) , 1189-1194
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nm1195-1189
Abstract
Clinical trials are under way using fetal cells to repair damaged neuronal circuitry. However, little is known about how transplanted immature neurons can grow anatomically correct connections in the adult central nervous system (CNS). We transplanted embryonic porcine neural cells in vivo into adult rat brains with neuronal and axonal loss typical of Parkinson's or Huntington's disease. Using complementary species-specific cellular markers, we found donor axons and CD44+ astroglial fibres in host white matter tracts up to 8 mm from CNS transplant sites, although only donor axons were capable of reaching correct gray matter target regions. This work demonstrates that adult host brain can orient growth of transplanted neurons and that there are differences in transplant donor glial and axonal growth patterns in cellular repair of the mature CNS.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neuropathological Evidence of Graft Survival and Striatal Reinnervation after the Transplantation of Fetal Mesencephalic Tissue in a Patient with Parkinson's DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- The lateral ganglionic eminence is the origin of cells committed to striatal phenotypes: neural transplantation and developmental evidenceBrain Research, 1994
- Cytoarchitectonic Development, Axon-Glia Relationships, and Long Distance Axon Growth of Porcine Striatal Xenografts in RatsExperimental Neurology, 1994
- Effects of the Age of Donor or Host Tissue on Astrocyte Migration from Intracerebral Xenografts of Corpus CallosumExperimental Neurology, 1993
- Survival of Implanted Fetal Dopamine Cells and Neurologic Improvement 12 to 46 Months after Transplantation for Parkinson's DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- Repellent cues in axon guidanceCurrent Opinion in Neurobiology, 1992
- Reformation of long axon pathways in adult rat central nervous system by human forebrain neuroblastsNature, 1990
- On the importance of being inhibited, or saying no to growth conesNeuron, 1988
- Monitoring of cell viability in suspensions of embryonic CNS tissue and its use as a criterion for intracerebral graft survivalBrain Research, 1985
- Fetal mesencephalic neurons survive and extend long axons across peripheral nervous system grafts inserted into the adult rat striatumNeuroscience Letters, 1984