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1.
Exp Neurol ; 190(1): 32-41, 2004 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15473978

ABSTRACT

Previous work indicated that pig umbilical cord matrix (pUCM) cells are a type of primitive stem cell and that these cells could be recovered after central or peripheral injection into rats that did not receive immune suppression therapy. To determine the safety and proliferation potential of pUCM cells after brain transplantation, approximately 150 pUCM cells were transplanted into the brains of rats that previously received a striatal injection of the neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). The pUCM cells were previously engineered to express enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP); in this way, the graft cells were identified. The rats did not receive immune suppression therapy. There were no postsurgical complications and the animals thrived following transplantation. At 2, 4, 6, and 8 weeks after transplantation, two rats were sacrificed and the morphology, size and number of graft cells, and the percentage of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-positive graft cells were determined. The size distribution of the grafted pUCM cells was unimodal and normal, and the average size increased significantly over the 2- to 8-week survival period. The number of pUCM cells increased from approximately 5400 cells at the 2-week survival period post-transplantation to approximately 20,000 cells at the 8-week survival period. There was an increase in the percentage of TH-positive pUCM cells from approximately 1% at the 2-week survival period to approximately 6% at the 8-week survival period. There was no evidence of a significant host immune response at any time; for example, no accumulation of CD-4, CD-8, CD-11b, CD-161 cells in the transplantation site. These results suggest that pUCM cells engraft and proliferate without requiring immune suppression. These findings also suggest that a subset of pUCM cells can differentiate into TH-positive cells within 8 weeks after transplantation into the 6-OHDA lesioned rat brain.


Subject(s)
Brain/cytology , Parkinsonian Disorders/therapy , Stem Cell Transplantation/methods , Transplantation, Heterologous/methods , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Brain/pathology , Brain/surgery , Catheterization , Cell Count , Cell Proliferation , Cell Size , Disease Models, Animal , Graft Survival , Neurosurgical Procedures , Parkinsonian Disorders/pathology , Parkinsonian Disorders/physiopathology , Rats , Swine , Transplantation Tolerance , Tyrosine 3-Monooxygenase/biosynthesis , Umbilical Cord/cytology
2.
Exp Neurol ; 182(2): 288-99, 2003 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12895440

ABSTRACT

Immune rejection of transplanted material is a potential complication of organ donation. In response to tissue transplantation, immune rejection has two components: a host defense directed against the grafted tissue and an immune response from the grafted tissue against the host (graft vs host disease). To treat immune rejection, transplant recipients are typically put on immunosuppression therapy. Complications may arise from immune suppression or from secondary effects of immunosuppression drugs. Our preliminary work indicated that stem cells may be xenotransplanted without immunosuppression therapy. Here, we investigated the survival of pig stem cells derived from umbilical cord mucous connective tissue (UCM) after transplantation into rats. Our data demonstrate that UCM cells survive at least 6 weeks without immune suppression of the host animals after transplantation into either the brain or the periphery. In the first experiment, UCM cells were transplanted into the rat brain and recovered in that tissue 2-6 weeks posttransplantation. At 4 weeks posttransplantation, the UCM cells engrafted into the brain along the injection tract. The cells were small and roughly spherical. The transplanted cells were positively immunostained using a pig-specific antibody for neuronal filament 70 (NF70). In contrast, 6 weeks posttransplantation, about 10% of the UCM cells that were recovered had migrated away from the injection site into the region just ventral to the corpus callosum; these cells also stained positively for NF70. In our second experiment, UCM cells that were engineered to constitutively express enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) were transplanted. These cells were recovered 2-4 weeks after brain transplantation. Engrafted cells expressing eGFP and positively staining for NF70 were recovered. This finding indicates a potential for gene therapy. In the third experiment, to determine whether depositing the graft into the brain protected UCM cells from immune detection/clearance, UCM cells were injected into the tail vein and/or the semitendinosis muscle in a group of animals. UCM cells were recovered from the muscle or within the kidney 3 weeks posttransplantation. In control experiments, rat brains were injected with PKH 26-labeled UCM cells that had been lysed by repeated sonic disruption. One and 2 weeks following injection, no PKH 26-labeled neurons or glia were observed. Taken together, these data indicate that UCM cells can survive xenotransplantation and that a subset of the UCM cells respond to local signals to differentiate along a neural lineage.


Subject(s)
Brain/cytology , Mesoderm/transplantation , Organic Chemicals , Stem Cell Transplantation/methods , Stem Cells/cytology , Umbilical Cord/transplantation , Animals , Cell Survival , Cells, Cultured , Fluorescent Dyes , Graft Survival , Green Fluorescent Proteins , Immunohistochemistry , Injections , Luminescent Proteins/biosynthesis , Luminescent Proteins/genetics , Mesoderm/cytology , Mesoderm/metabolism , Neurofilament Proteins/biosynthesis , Neurosurgical Procedures/methods , Rats , Rats, Inbred Lew , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Stem Cells/metabolism , Swine , Transfection , Umbilical Cord/cytology , Umbilical Cord/embryology
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