Kordower Jeffrey H, Vinuela Angel, Chu Yaping, Isacson Ole, Redmond D Eugene
Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, 60612.
Department of Neurology, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Belmont, Massachusetts, 02478.
J Comp Neurol. 2017 Feb 15;525(3):498-512. doi: 10.1002/cne.24081. Epub 2016 Aug 29.
Clinical trials testing the hypothesis that fetal dopamine grafts would provide antiparkinsonian benefit in patients who had already developed side effects from their long-term use of L-dopa revealed, in some cases, the presence of dyskinesias even in the absence of L-dopa. The form, intensity, and frequency of these dyskinesias were quite variable, but their manifestation slowed the clinical development of cell replacement therapies. Rodent models of graft-induced dyskinesias (GIDs) have been proposed, but their accuracy in modeling GIDs has been questioned because they usually require amphetamine for their presentation. The present study attempted to model GIDs in parkinsonian monkeys and, for the first time, to test the effect of grafts on previously dyskinetic monkeys. Toward this end, monkeys were rendered parkinsonian with n-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) and dyskinetic with levodopa. They then received intraputamenal grafts of fetal dopaminergic cells, control cerebellar cells, or vehicle bilaterally and were studied for 18 months. Dopaminergic cells were grafted in a manner designed to produce either "hot spot" or "widespread" striatal innervation. Although levodopa-induced dyskinesias could be elicited postoperatively, GIDs were never observed in any animal at any time after grafting. Grafted monkeys were also challenged with levodopa but did not show any greater responses to these challenges than before grafting. These studies support the development of future dopamine neuron cell transplantation therapy-based approaches, indicating that in relevant primate models with appropriate cell preparation methodology, with successful graft survival and putamenal dopamine innervation, there is no evidence of graft-induced dyskinesias. J. Comp. Neurol. 525:498-512, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
对于那些因长期使用左旋多巴而已经出现副作用的患者,胎儿多巴胺移植能够提供抗帕金森病益处。在某些情况下,这些试验揭示,即使在没有左旋多巴的情况下也存在运动障碍。这些运动障碍的形式、强度和频率差异很大,但其表现减缓了细胞替代疗法的临床发展。已经提出了移植诱导的运动障碍(GIDs)的啮齿动物模型,但它们在模拟GIDs方面的准确性受到质疑,因为它们通常需要苯丙胺来呈现这种症状。本研究试图在帕金森病猴子中模拟GIDs,并首次测试移植对先前患有运动障碍的猴子的影响。为此,用N-甲基-4-苯基-1,2,3,6-四氢吡啶(MPTP)使猴子患帕金森病,并用左旋多巴使其出现运动障碍。然后,它们双侧接受胎儿多巴胺能细胞、对照小脑细胞或赋形剂的壳核内移植,并进行了18个月的研究。多巴胺能细胞以旨在产生“热点”或“广泛”纹状体神经支配的方式进行移植。虽然术后可诱发左旋多巴诱导的运动障碍,但在移植后的任何时间,任何动物都未观察到GIDs。移植后的猴子也接受了左旋多巴激发试验,但与移植前相比,对这些激发试验没有表现出任何更大的反应。这些研究支持未来基于多巴胺神经元细胞移植疗法的方法的发展,表明在采用适当细胞制备方法的相关灵长类动物模型中,移植成功存活且壳核有多巴胺神经支配,没有证据表明存在移植诱导的运动障碍。《比较神经学杂志》525:498 - 512,2017年。© 2016威利期刊公司