Haus Daniel L, López-Velázquez Luci, Gold Eric M, Cunningham Kelly M, Perez Harvey, Anderson Aileen J, Cummings Brian J
Sue & Bill Gross Stem Cell Center, University of California, Irvine,CA 92697-1750, USA; Anatomy & Neurobiology, University of California, Irvine,CA 92697-1750, USA.
UCI Institute for Memory Impairments and Neurological Disorders (MIND), University of California, Irvine,CA 92697-1750, USA.
Exp Neurol. 2016 Jul;281:1-16. doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2016.04.008. Epub 2016 Apr 11.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) in humans can result in permanent tissue damage and has been linked to cognitive impairment that lasts years beyond the initial insult. Clinically effective treatment strategies have yet to be developed. Transplantation of human neural stem cells (hNSCs) has the potential to restore cognition lost due to injury, however, the vast majority of rodent TBI/hNSC studies to date have evaluated cognition only at early time points, typically <1month post-injury and cell transplantation. Additionally, human cell engraftment and long-term survival in rodent models of TBI has been difficult to achieve due to host immunorejection of the transplanted human cells, which confounds conclusions pertaining to transplant-mediated behavioral improvement. To overcome these shortfalls, we have developed a novel TBI xenotransplantation model that utilizes immunodeficient athymic nude (ATN) rats as the host recipient for the post-TBI transplantation of human embryonic stem cell (hESC) derived NSCs and have evaluated cognition in these animals at long-term (≥2months) time points post-injury. We report that immunodeficient ATN rats demonstrate hippocampal-dependent spatial memory deficits (Novel Place, Morris Water Maze), but not non-spatial (Novel Object) or emotional/anxiety-related (Elevated Plus Maze, Conditioned Taste Aversion) deficits, at 2-3months post-TBI, confirming that ATN rats recapitulate some of the cognitive deficits found in immunosufficient animal strains. Approximately 9-25% of transplanted hNSCs survived for at least 5months post-transplantation and differentiated into mature neurons (NeuN, 18-38%), astrocytes (GFAP, 13-16%), and oligodendrocytes (Olig2, 11-13%). Furthermore, while this model of TBI (cortical impact) targets primarily cortex and the underlying hippocampus and generates a large lesion cavity, hNSC transplantation facilitated cognitive recovery without affecting either lesion volume or total spared cortical or hippocampal tissue volume. Instead, we have found an overall increase in host hippocampal neuron survival in hNSC transplanted animals and demonstrate that a correlation exists between hippocampal neuron survival and cognitive performance. Together, these findings support the use of immunodeficient rodents in models of TBI that involve the transplantation of human cells, and suggest that hNSC transplantation may be a viable, long-term therapy to restore cognition after brain injury.
人类创伤性脑损伤(TBI)可导致永久性组织损伤,并与持续数年之久的认知障碍有关,这种认知障碍在最初损伤后仍会持续存在。目前尚未开发出临床有效的治疗策略。人类神经干细胞(hNSCs)移植有可能恢复因损伤而丧失的认知功能,然而,迄今为止,绝大多数啮齿动物TBI/hNSC研究仅在早期时间点评估认知功能,通常是在损伤和细胞移植后<1个月。此外,由于宿主对移植的人类细胞产生免疫排斥反应,人类细胞在TBI啮齿动物模型中的植入和长期存活一直难以实现,这使得有关移植介导的行为改善的结论变得复杂。为了克服这些不足,我们开发了一种新型的TBI异种移植模型,该模型利用免疫缺陷的无胸腺裸鼠(ATN)作为宿主受体,用于TBI后人胚胎干细胞(hESC)衍生的NSCs移植,并在损伤后的长期(≥2个月)时间点评估这些动物的认知功能。我们报告称,免疫缺陷的ATN大鼠在TBI后2 - 3个月表现出海马依赖性空间记忆缺陷(新位置、莫里斯水迷宫),但没有非空间(新物体)或情绪/焦虑相关(高架十字迷宫、条件性味觉厌恶)缺陷,这证实了ATN大鼠重现了免疫健全动物品系中发现的一些认知缺陷。大约9 - 25%的移植hNSCs在移植后至少存活5个月,并分化为成熟神经元(NeuN,18 - 38%)、星形胶质细胞(GFAP,13 - 16%)和少突胶质细胞(Olig2,11 - 13%)。此外,虽然这种TBI模型(皮质撞击)主要针对皮质及其下方的海马体,并产生一个大的损伤腔,但hNSC移植促进了认知恢复,而不影响损伤体积或剩余皮质或海马体组织的总体积。相反,我们发现hNSC移植动物的宿主海马神经元存活率总体增加,并证明海马神经元存活率与认知表现之间存在相关性。总之,这些发现支持在涉及人类细胞移植的TBI模型中使用免疫缺陷啮齿动物,并表明hNSC移植可能是一种可行的长期疗法,用于恢复脑损伤后的认知功能。