Human stem cell–derived neurons and neural circuitry therapeutics: Next frontier in spinal cord injury repair
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Published:2022-08-16
Issue:23
Volume:247
Page:2142-2151
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ISSN:1535-3702
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Container-title:Experimental Biology and Medicine
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Exp Biol Med (Maywood)
Author:
Paredes-Espinosa Maria Belen1ORCID,
Paluh Janet L1ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Nanobioscience Constellation, College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, State University of New York Polytechnic Institute, Albany, NY 12203, USA
Abstract
Spinal cord injury (SCI) remains a life-altering event that devastates those injured and the families that support them. Numerous laboratories are engaged in preclinical and clinical trials to repair the injured spinal cord with stem cell–derived therapeutics. A new developmental paradigm reveals early bifurcation of brain or trunk neurons in mammals via neuromesodermal progenitors (NMPs) relevant to therapies requiring homotypic spinal cord neural populations. Human-induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) NMP-derived spinal motor neurons generated ex vivo following this natural developmental route demonstrate robust survival in vivo when delivered as suspension grafts or as in vitro preformed encapsulated neuronal circuitry when transplanted into a rat C4-C5 hemicontusion injury site. Use of in vitro matured neurons avoids in vivo differentiation challenges of using pluripotent hiPSC or multipotent neural stem cell (NSC) or mesenchymal stem cell therapeutics. In this review, we provide an injury to therapeutics overview focusing on how stem cell and developmental fields are merging to generate exquisitely matched spinal motor neurons for SCI therapeutic studies. The complexity of the SCI microenvironment generated by trauma to neurons and vasculature, along with infiltrating inflammatory cells and scarring, underlies the challenging cytokine microenvironment that therapeutic cells encounter. An overview of evolving but limited stem cell–based SCI therapies that have progressed from preclinical to clinical trials illustrates the challenges and need for additional stem cell–based therapeutic approaches. The focus here on neurons describes how NMP-based neurotechnologies are advancing parallel strategies such as transplantation of preformed neuronal circuitry as well as human in vitro gastruloid multicellular models of trunk central and peripheral nervous system integration with organs. NMP-derived neurons are expected to be powerful drivers of the next generation of SCI therapeutics and integrate well with combination therapies that may utilize alternate biomimetic scaffolds for bridging injuries or flexible biodegradable electronics for electrostimulation.
Funder
New York Stem Cell
SUNY Polytechnic SEED award
New York State Department of Health (NYS DOH) Spinal Cord Injury Research Board (NYSCIRB), Projects to Accelerate Research Translation
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
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