Researchers at Lund University in
Sweden have succeeded in restoring mobility and sensation of touch in
stroke-afflicted rats by reprogramming human skin cells to become nerve cells,
which were then transplanted into the rats’ brains. The study has now been
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
“Six months
after the transplantation, we could see how the new cells had repaired the
damage that a stroke had caused in the rats’ brains,” says Professor Zaal
Kokaia, who together with senior professor Olle Lindvall and researcher Sara
Palma-Tortosa at the Division of Neurology is behind the study.
Several previous
studies from the Lund team and others have shown that it is possible to
transplant nerve cells derived from human stem cells or from reprogrammed cells
into brains of rats afflicted by stroke. However, it was not known whether the
transplanted cells can form connections correctly in the rat brain in a way
that restores normal movement and feeling.
“We have used
tracking techniques, electron microscopy and other methods, such as light to
switch off activity in the transplanted cells, as a way to show that they
really have connected correctly in the damaged nerve circuits. We have been
able to see that the fibres from the transplanted cells have grown to the other
side of the brain, the side where we did not transplant any cells, and created
connections. No previous study has shown this,” says Zaal Kokaia, who, even
though he and colleague Olle Lindvall have studied the brain for several
decades, is surprised by the results.
“It is
remarkable to find that it is actually possible to repair a stroke-damaged
brain and recreate nerve connections that have been lost. The study kindles
hope that in the future it could be possible to replace dead nerve cells with
new healthy nerve cells also in stroke patients, even though there is a long
way to go before achieving that,” says Olle Lindvall.
The researchers
have used human skin cells that have been reprogrammed in the laboratory to become
nerve cells. They were then transplanted into the cerebral cortex of rats, in
the part of the brain that is most often damaged after a stroke. Now the
researchers will undertake further studies.
“We want to know
more about how the transplanted cells affect the opposite hemisphere of the
brain. We also want to take a closer look at how a transplant affects
intellectual functions such as memory. In addition, we will study possible side
effects. Safety is, of course, extremely important for cell transplantation if
it is going to be used clinically in the future,” says Zaal Kokaia.
Source: https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/researchers-successfully-repair-stroke-damaged-rat-brains
Journal article: https://www.pnas.org/content/early/2020/04/02/2000690117
Image:
Transplanted nerve cells (transplant up to the right), which were produced from
human skin cells, send their nerve fibres to the cerebral cortex on the
opposite side of the brain in a stroke-afflicted rat
Source: https://myfusimotors.com/2020/04/09/repairing-stroke-damaged-rat-brains/
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