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Human amnion epithelial cells rescue cell death via immunomodulation of microglia in a mouse model of perinatal brain injury

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 07:11 authored by Bryan Leaw, Dandan Zhu, Jean Tan, Ruth Muljadi, Mohamed Saad, Joanne Mockler, Euan Wallace, Rebecca Lim, Mary TolcosMary Tolcos
BACKGROUND: Human amnion epithelial cells (hAECs) are clonogenic and have been proposed to reduce inflammatory-induced tissue injury. Perturbation of the immune response is implicated in the pathogenesis of perinatal brain injury; modulating this response could thus be a novel therapy for treating or preventing such injury. The immunomodulatory properties of hAECs have been shown in other animal models, but a detailed investigation of the effects on brain immune cells following injury has not been undertaken. Here, we investigate the effects of hAECs on microglia, the first immune responders to injury within the brain. METHODS: We generated a mouse model combining neonatal inflammation and perinatal hyperoxia, both of which are risk factors associated with perinatal brain injury. On embryonic day 16 we administered lipopolysaccharide (LPS), or saline (control), intra-amniotically to C57Bl/6 J mouse pups. On postnatal day (P)0, LPS pups were placed in hyperoxia (65% oxygen) and control pups in normoxia for 14 days. Pups were given either hAECs or saline intravenously on P4. RESULTS: At P14, relative to controls, LPS and hyperoxia pups had reduced body weight, increased density of apoptotic cells (TUNEL) in the cortex, striatum and white matter, astrocytes (GFAP) in the white matter and activated microglia (CD68) in the cortex and striatum, but no change in total microglia density (Iba1). hAEC administration rescued the decreased body weight and reduced apoptosis and astrocyte areal coverage in the white matter, but increased the density of total and activated microglia. We then stimulated primary microglia (CD45lowCD11b+) with LPS for 24 h, followed by co-culture with hAEC conditioned medium for 48 h. hAEC conditioned medium increased microglial phagocytic activity, decreased microglia apoptosis and decreased M1 activation markers (CD86). Stimulating hAECs for 24 h with LPS did not alter release of cytokines known to modulate microglia activity. CONCLUSIONS: These da

History

Journal

Stem Cell Research & Therapy

Volume

8

Issue

1

Start page

1

End page

17

Total pages

17

Publisher

BioMed Central Ltd.

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s). 2017 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Former Identifier

2006084058

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-09-21

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