Compartir
Título
Intracerebellar injection of monocytic immature myeloid cells prevents the adverse effects caused by stereotactic surgery in a model of cerebellar neurodegeneration.
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Selective neurodegeneration
Neuroinflammation
Immune cell modulation
Cell theraphy
Surgical brain injury
MDSCs
Clasificación UNESCO
2490 Neurociencias
2412 Inmunología
Fecha de publicación
2024-02-14
Editor
Springer Nature
Citación
Del Pilar, C., Garrido-Matilla, L., Del Pozo-Filíu, L., Lebrón-Galán, R., Arias, R. F., Clemente, D., Alonso, J. R., Weruaga, E., y Díaz, D. (2024). Intracerebellar injection of monocytic immature myeloid cells prevents the adverse effects caused by stereotactic surgery in a model of cerebellar neurodegeneration. Journal of Neuroinflammation, 21(1), 49. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-023-03000-8
Resumen
[EN] Background Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) constitute a recently discovered bone-marrow-derived cell
type useful for dealing with neuroinflammatory disorders. However, these cells are only formed during inflammatory
conditions from immature myeloid cells (IMCs) that acquire immunosuppressive activity, thus being commonly gathered
from diseased animals. Then, to obtain a more clinically feasible source, we characterized IMCs directly derived
from healthy bone marrow and proved their potential immunosuppressive activity under pathological conditions
in vitro. We then explored their neuroprotective potential in a model of human cerebellar ataxia, the Purkinje Cell
Degeneration (PCD) mouse, as it displays a well-defined neurodegenerative and neuroinflammatory process that can
be also aggravated by invasive surgeries.
Methods IMCs were obtained from healthy bone marrow and co-cultured with activated T cells. The proliferation
and apoptotic rate of the later were analyzed with Tag-it Violet. For in vivo studies, IMCs were transplanted by stereotactic
surgery into the cerebellum of PCD mice. We also used sham-operated animals as controls of the surgical
effects, as well as their untreated counterparts. Motor behavior of mice was assessed by rotarod test. The Purkinje cell
density was measured by immunohistochemistry and cell death assessed with the TUNEL technique. We also analyzed
the microglial phenotype by immunofluorescence and the expression pattern of inflammation-related genes
by qPCR. Parametric tests were applied depending on the specific experiment: one or two way ANOVA and Student’s
T test.
Results IMCs were proven to effectively acquire immunosuppressive activity under pathological conditions in vitro,
thus acting as MDSCs. Concerning in vivo studios, sham-operated PCD mice suffered detrimental effects in motor
coordination, Purkinje cell survival and microglial activation. After intracranial administration of IMCs into the cerebellum
of PCD mice, no special benefits were detected in the transplanted animals when compared to untreated mice. Nonetheless, this transplant almost completely prevented the impairments caused by the surgery in PCD mice, probably
by the modulation of the inflammatory patterns.
Conclusions Our work comprise two main translational findings: (1) IMCs can be directly used as they behave
as MDSCs under pathological conditions, thus avoiding their gathering from diseased subjects; (2) IMCs are promising
adjuvants when performing neurosurgery.
URI
DOI
10.1186/s12974-023-03000-8
Versión del editor
Collections
Files in this item
Tamaño:
2.931Mb
Formato:
Adobe PDF
Descripción:
Versión publicada












