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TRANSLATIONAL AND CLINICAL RESEARCH |
aDivision of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA;
bMedical Research and Surgery Services, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA;
cStem Cell Unit, Laboratory of Neurosciences, National Institute for Aging, NIH, Baltimore, Maryland, USA;
dInvitrogen, Corporate Research Laboratories, Carlsbad, California, USA
Key Words. Adult neurogenesis • Doublecortin • Neural stem/progenitor cells • Stem/progenitor cell transplantation • Stem cell aging Stem cell differentiation
Correspondence: Ashok K. Shetty, M.Sc., Ph.D., Division of Neurosurgery, DUMC Box 3807, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA. Telephone: (919) 286-0411, ext. 7096; Fax: (919) 286-4662; e-mail: Ashok.Shetty{at}Duke.Edu
Received November 8, 2006;
accepted for publication May 4, 2007.
Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest is found at the end of this article.
First published online in STEM CELLS EXPRESS May 17, 2007.
Neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus (DG) declines severely by middle age, potentially because of age-related changes in the DG microenvironment. We hypothesize that providing fresh glial restricted progenitors (GRPs) or neural stem cells (NSCs) to the aging hippocampus via grafting enriches the DG microenvironment and thereby stimulates the production of new granule cells from endogenous NSCs. The GRPs isolated from the spinal cords of embryonic day 13.5 transgenic F344 rats expressing human alkaline phosphatase gene and NSCs isolated from embryonic day 9 caudal neural tubes of Sox-2:EGFP transgenic mice were expanded in vitro and grafted into the hippocampi of middle-aged (12 months old) F344 rats. Both types of grafts survived well, and grafted NSCs in addition migrated to all layers of the hippocampus. Phenotypic characterization revealed that both GRPs and NSCs differentiated predominantly into astrocytes and oligodendrocytic progenitors. Neuronal differentiation of graft-derived cells was mostly absent except in the dentate subgranular zone (SGZ), where some of the migrated NSCs but not GRPs differentiated into neurons. Analyses of the numbers of newly born neurons in the DG using 5'-bromodeoxyuridine and/or doublecortin assays, however, demonstrated considerably increased dentate neurogenesis in animals receiving grafts of GRPs or NSCs in comparison with both naïve controls and animals receiving sham-grafting surgery. Thus, both GRPs and NSCs survive well, differentiate predominantly into glia, and stimulate the endogenous NSCs in the SGZ to produce more new dentate granule cells following grafting into the aging hippocampus. Grafting of GRPs or NSCs therefore provides an attractive approach for improving neurogenesis in the aging hippocampus.
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