Redmond D Eugene
Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, USA.
Neuroscientist. 2002 Oct;8(5):457-88. doi: 10.1177/107385802237703.
The concept of replacing lost dopamine neurons in Parkinson's disease using mesencephalic brain cells from fetal cadavers has been supported by over 20 years of research in animals and over a decade of clinical studies. The ambitious goal of these studies was no less than a molecular and cellular "cure" for Parkinson's disease, other neurodegenerative diseases, and spinal cord injury. Much research has been done in rodents, and a few studies have been done in nonhuman primate models. Early uncontrolled clinical reports were enthusiastic, but the outcome of the first randomized, double blind, controlled study challenged the idea that dopamine replacement cells can cure Parkinson's disease, although there were some significant positive findings. Were the earlier animal studies and clinical reports wrong? Should we give up on the goal? Some aspects of the trial design and implantation methods may have led to lack of effects and to some side effects such as dyskinesias. But a detailed review of clinical neural transplants published to date still suggests that neural transplantation variably reverses some aspects of Parkinson's disease, although differing methods make exact comparisons difficult. While the randomized clinical studies have been in progress, new methods have shown promise for increasing transplant survival and distribution, reconstructing the circuits to provide dopamine to the appropriate targets and with normal regulation. Selected promising new strategies are reviewed that block apoptosis induced by tissue dissection, promote vascularization of grafts, reduce oxidant stress, provide key growth factors, and counteract adverse effects of increased age. New sources of replacement cells and stem cells may provide additional advantages for the future. Full recovery from parkinsonism appears not only to be possible, but a reliable cell replacement treatment may finally be near.
利用来自胎儿尸体的中脑细胞替代帕金森病中丢失的多巴胺能神经元这一概念,已得到20多年动物研究及十多年临床研究的支持。这些研究的宏伟目标不亚于对帕金森病、其他神经退行性疾病和脊髓损伤进行分子和细胞层面的“治愈”。在啮齿动物身上已开展了大量研究,在非人类灵长类动物模型上也进行了一些研究。早期未经对照的临床报告令人振奋,但首个随机、双盲、对照研究的结果对多巴胺替代细胞可治愈帕金森病这一观点提出了挑战,不过也有一些显著的积极发现。早期的动物研究和临床报告有误吗?我们应该放弃这个目标吗?试验设计和植入方法的某些方面可能导致了疗效不佳以及出现诸如运动障碍等一些副作用。但对迄今已发表的临床神经移植进行详细回顾仍表明,神经移植在不同程度上可逆转帕金森病的某些方面,尽管不同方法难以进行精确比较。在随机临床研究进行的同时,新方法已显示出有望提高移植存活率和分布范围,重建神经回路以向合适靶点正常调节供应多巴胺。本文综述了一些有前景的新策略,这些策略可阻断组织解剖诱导的细胞凋亡、促进移植物血管化、减轻氧化应激、提供关键生长因子以及抵消年龄增长带来的不利影响。替代细胞和干细胞的新来源可能为未来带来更多优势。帕金森病完全康复似乎不仅是可能的,而且可靠的细胞替代疗法可能最终即将实现。