Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4347475 | Neuroscience Letters | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
This study is designed to evaluate the therapeutic effects of three types of neurospheres (NSs) derived from brain, bone marrow and adipose tissue in a rat model of spinal contusive injury. As shown by BBB locomotor rating scale and grid test, the optimal therapeutic responses generated by subventricular zone-derived NSs (SVZ-NSs), and followed by adipose-derived (AD-NSs) and bone marrow-derived NSs (BM-NSs) after being grafted into the injured spinal cord. In three cell-treated groups, very few (<1%) grafted cells survived and these survived cells mainly differentiated into oligodendrocytes at week 12 after injury. Additionally, all the cell-treated groups, especially in the SVZ-treated group showed an increase in host oligodendrocytes than control group. Moreover, the level of selective neurotrophins (NTs) in the SVZ-NSs group were significantly higher than those in the BM-NSs and AD-NSs groups, and the level of NTs in the saline group was also significantly higher than sham group. Therefore, not cell replacement or infusion but neuroprotective action associated with endogenous oligodendrocytes and NTs that active by the grafted NSs may contribute to the functional recovery.
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Authors
Hong-tian Zhang, Hao-yu Cheng, Ying-qian Cai, Xu Ma, Wen-peng Liu, Zhong-jie Yan, Xiao-dan Jiang, Ru-xiang Xu,