66 resultados para Schwann, Theodor


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The central and peripheral nervous systems are involved in multiple agedependent neurological deficits that are often attributed to alterations in function of myelinating glial cells. However, the molecular events that underlie the age-related decline of glial cell function are unknown. We used Schwann cells as a model to study biological processes affected in glial cells by aging. We comprehensively profiled gene expression of the Schwann cell-rich mouse sciatic nerve throughout life, from day of birth until senescence (840 days of age). We combined the aging data with the microarray transcriptional data obtained using nerves isolated from Schwann cell-specific neuropathy-inducing mutants MPZCre/þ/Lpin1fE2-3/fE2-3, MPZCre/þ/ScapfE1/fE1 and Pmp22-null mice. A majority of age related transcripts were also affected in the analyzed mouse models of neuropathy (54.4%) and in development (59.5%) indicating a high level of overlapping in implicated molecular pathways. We observed that compared to peripheral nerve development, dynamically changing expression profiles in aging have opposite (anticorrelated) orientation while they copy the orientation of transcriptional changes observed in analyzed neuropathy models. Subsequent clustering and biological annotation of dynamically changing transcripts revealed that the processes most significantly deregulated in aging include inflammatory/ immune response and lipid biosynthesis/metabolism. Importantly, the changes in these pathways were also observed in myelinated oligodendrocyte- rich optic nerves of aged mice, albeit with lower magnitude. This observation suggests that similar biological processes are affected in aging glial cells in central and peripheral nervous systems, however with different dynamics. Our data, which provide the first comprehensive comparison of molecular changes in glial cells in three distinct biological conditions comprising development, aging and disease, provide not only a new inside into the molecular alterations underlying neural system aging but also identify target pathways for potential therapeutical approaches to prevent or delay complications associated with age-related and inherited forms of neuropathies.

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Tissue engineering is a popular topic in peripheral nerve repair. Combining a nerve conduit with supporting adipose-derived cells could offer an opportunity to prevent time-consuming Schwann cell culture or the use of an autograft with its donor site morbidity and eventually improve clinical outcome. The aim of this study was to provide a broad overview over promising transplantable cells under equal experimental conditions over a long-term period. A 10-mm gap in the sciatic nerve of female Sprague-Dawley rats (7 groups of 7 animals, 8 weeks old) was bridged through a biodegradable fibrin conduit filled with rat adipose-derived stem cells (rASCs), differentiated rASCs (drASCs), human (h)ASCs from the superficial and deep abdominal layer, human stromal vascular fraction (SVF), or rat Schwann cells, respectively. As a control, we resutured a nerve segment as an autograft. Long-term evaluation was carried out after 12 weeks comprising walking track, morphometric, and MRI analyses. The sciatic functional index was calculated. Cross sections of the nerve, proximal, distal, and in between the two sutures, were analyzed for re-/myelination and axon count. Gastrocnemius muscle weights were compared. MRI proved biodegradation of the conduit. Differentiated rat ASCs performed significantly better than undifferentiated rASCs with less muscle atrophy and superior functional results. Superficial hASCs supported regeneration better than deep hASCs, in line with published in vitro data. The best regeneration potential was achieved by the drASC group when compared with other adipose tissue-derived cells. Considering the ease of procedure from harvesting to transplanting, we conclude that comparison of promising cells for nerve regeneration revealed that particularly differentiated ASCs could be a clinically translatable route toward new methods to enhance peripheral nerve repair.

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Le système nerveux périphérique est responsable de la transmission des impulses motrices, ainsi que de la réception des afférences sensorielles. Les lésions traumatiques des nerfs périphériques conduisent à une impotence fonctionnelle qui peut être dévastant, notamment chez les travailleurs manuels,. La récupération fonctionnelle est donc le but principal dans chirurgie des nerfs périphériques. Malheureusement, une suture directe des moignons nerveux est souvent impossible dans le contexte des traumatismes complexes qui surviennent lors des accidents. La suture nerveuse par interposition d'autogreffe reste le gold standard dans la pratique chirurgicale mais nécessite le sacrifice d'un nerf donneur, avec dysesthésie et possibles douleurs neuropathiques conséquentes. Alternativement, des guides tubulaires pour les nerfs peuvent être utilisées si le gap nerveux est inférieur à 3 cm. Plusieurs guides résorbables en collagène sont approuve en Europe et aux Etas Unis (FDA). Dans cette étude, des conduits de collagène ont été associe a des cellules régénératives (cellules souches adultes) comme stratégie supplémentaire de régénération. Une fois testé le rapport des cellules avec le biomatériau (NeuraGen® nerve guides) in vitro, une étude in vivo dans le rat a été effectuée. Les différents groupes de conduits ont été supplémentés respectivement avec Schwann cells (SC); avec cellules souches adultes dérivées de la moelle épinière, différentiées en cellules "Schwann-like" (dMSC); avec cellules souches adultes dérivées de la graisse, différentiées en cellules "Schwann-like" (dASC). Un groupe de conduits avec du milieu de culture sans cellules a été utilisé comme group control. Les conduits ont été utilisés pour combler un gap de 1cm dans un model de section totale du nerf sciatique chez le rat. Deux semaines post implantation, une analyse immuno-histochimique a été effectuée pour évaluer la régénération axonales et l'infiltration de cellules de Schwann au niveau du conduit. Les cellules ont montré une adhérence efficace aux parois de collagène. En particulier, les cellules de Schwann ont montré une amélioration significative au niveau du sprouting distale. Par contre, aucune différence significative n'a été remarquée entre les groupes pour le sprouting axonale proximal. De plus, si les cellules souches ont montré un pattern de sprouting diffus, les cellules de Schwann ont par contre garanti un cône de croissance typique, associé a une affinité remarquable pour les parois de collagène. NeuraGen® guides pourraient donc être un moyen adapté a l'association avec la thérapie cellulaire en raison de la bonne adhérence des cellules au biomatériau. Des modifications de surface dans le but d'améliorer la performance neurotrophique cellulaire in vivo (e.g. peptides de matrice extracellulaire) pourront être utilisées dans des applications futures.

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Lactate, a product of glycolysis, has been shown to play a key role in the metabolic support of neurons/axons in the CNS by both astrocytes and oligodendrocytes through monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs). Despite such importance in the CNS, little is known about MCT expression and lactate function in the PNS. Here we show that mouse MCT1, MCT2, and MCT4 are expressed in the PNS. While DRG neurons express MCT1, myelinating Schwann cells (SCs) coexpress MCT1 and MCT4 in a domain-specific fashion, mainly in regions of noncompact myelin. Interestingly, SC-specific downregulation of MCT1 expression in rat neuron/SC cocultures led to increased myelination, while its downregulation in neurons resulted in a decreased amount of neurofilament. Finally, pure rat SCs grown in the presence of lactate exhibited an increase in the level of expression of the main myelin regulator gene Krox20/Egr2 and the myelin gene P0. These data indicate that lactate homeostasis participates in the regulation of the SC myelination program and reveal that similar to CNS, PNS axon-glial metabolic interactions are most likely mediated by MCTs.