A Novel Ex Vivo Model to Study Therapeutic Treatments for Myelin Repair following Ischemic Damage
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Published:2023-06-30
Issue:13
Volume:24
Page:10972
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ISSN:1422-0067
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Container-title:International Journal of Molecular Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:IJMS
Author:
Werner Luisa1, Gliem Michael1, Rychlik Nicole1, Pavic Goran1ORCID, Reiche Laura1ORCID, Kirchhoff Frank2ORCID, Silva Oliveira Junior Markley1ORCID, Gruchot Joel1ORCID, Meuth Sven G.1, Küry Patrick1ORCID, Göttle Peter1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurology, Medical Faculty, Heinrich Heine University, 40225 Düsseldorf, Germany 2. Molecular Physiology, Center for Integrative Physiology and Molecular Medicine, University of Saarland, 66424 Homburg, Germany
Abstract
Stroke is a major reason for persistent disability due to insufficient treatment strategies beyond reperfusion, leading to oligodendrocyte death and axon demyelination, persistent inflammation and astrogliosis in peri-infarct areas. After injury, oligodendroglial precursor cells (OPCs) have been shown to compensate for myelin loss and prevent axonal loss through the replacement of lost oligodendrocytes, an inefficient process leaving axons chronically demyelinated. Phenotypic screening approaches in demyelinating paradigms revealed substances that promote myelin repair. We established an ex vivo adult organotypic coronal slice culture (OCSC) system to study repair after stroke in a resource-efficient way. Post-photothrombotic OCSCs can be manipulated for 8 d by exposure to pharmacologically active substances testing remyelination activity. OCSCs were isolated from a NG2-CreERT2-td-Tomato knock-in transgenic mouse line to analyze oligodendroglial fate/differentiation and kinetics. Parbendazole boosted differentiation of NG2+ cells and stabilized oligodendroglial fate reflected by altered expression of associated markers PDGFR-α, CC1, BCAS1 and Sox10 and GFAP. In vitro scratch assay and chemical ischemia confirmed the observed effects upon parbendazole treatment. Adult OCSCs represent a fast, reproducible, and quantifiable model to study OPC differentiation competence after stroke. Pharmacological stimulation by means of parbendazole promoted OPC differentiation.
Funder
Christiane and Claudia Hempel Foundation for clinical stem cell research James and Elisabeth Cloppenburg, Peek and Cloppenburg Düsseldorf Stiftung
Subject
Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis
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