Anti-inflammatory mechanism of intravascular neural stem cell transplantation in haemorrhagic stroke

Soon‐Tae Lee, Kon Chu(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Keun‐Hwa Jung(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Se-Jeong Kim(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Dong Hyun Kim(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Kyung-Mook Kang(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Nan Hyung Hong(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Jin Hee Kim(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Jae-Joon Ban(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Hee-Kwon Park(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Seung Up Kim(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Chung‐Gyu Park(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Sang Kun Lee(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Manho Kim(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), Jae‐Kyu Roh(Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
Brain
December 21, 2007
Cited by 421

Abstract

Neural stem cell (NSC) transplantation has been investigated as a means to reconstitute the damaged brain after stroke. In this study, however, we investigated the effect on acute cerebral and peripheral inflammation after intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH). NSCs (H1 clone) from fetal human brain were injected intravenously (NSCs-iv, 5 million cells) or intracerebrally (NSCs-ic, 1 million cells) at 2 or 24 h after collagenase-induced ICH in a rat model. Only NSCs-iv-2 h resulted in fewer initial neurologic deteriorations and reduced brain oedema formation, inflammatory infiltrations (OX-42, myeloperoxidase) and apoptosis (activated caspase-3, TUNEL) compared to the vehicle-injected control animals. Rat neurosphere-iv-2 h, but not human fibroblast-iv-2 h, also reduced the brain oedema and the initial neurologic deficits. Human NSCs-iv-2 h also attenuated both cerebral and splenic activations of tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappaB). However, we observed only a few stem cells in brain sections of the NSCs-iv-2 h group; in the main, they were detected in marginal zone of spleens. To investigate whether NSCs interact with spleen to reduce cerebral inflammation, we performed a splenectomy prior to ICH induction, which eliminated the effect of NSCs-iv-2 h transplantation on brain water content and inflammatory infiltrations. NSCs also inhibited in vitro macrophage activations after lipopolysaccharide stimulation in a cell-to-cell contact dependent manner. In summary, early intravenous NSC injection displayed anti-inflammatory functionality that promoted neuroprotection, mainly by interrupting splenic inflammatory responses after ICH.


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