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Peptide-based scaffolds support human cortical progenitor graft integration to reduce atrophy and promote functional repair in a model of stroke

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 05:29 authored by Fahad Somaa, Tingyi Wang, Jonathan Niclis, K. Bruggeman, Jessica Kauhausen, Haoyao Guo, Stuart McDougall, Richard WilliamsRichard Williams, David Nisbet, Lachlan Thompson, Clare Parish
Stem cell transplants offer significant hope for brain repair following ischemic damage. Pre-clinical work suggests that therapeutic mechanisms may be multi-faceted, incorporating bone-fide circuit reconstruction by transplanted neurons, but also protection/regeneration of host circuitry. Here, we engineered hydrogel scaffolds to form "bio-bridges" within the necrotic lesion cavity, providing physical and trophic support to transplanted human embryonic stem cell-derived cortical progenitors, as well as residual host neurons. Scaffolds were fabricated by the self-assembly of peptides for a laminin-derived epitope (IKVAV), thereby mimicking the brain's major extracellular protein. Following focal ischemia in rats, scaffold-supported cell transplants induced progressive motor improvements over 9 months, compared to cell- or scaffold-only implants. These grafts were larger, exhibited greater neuronal differentiation, and showed enhanced electrophysiological properties reflective of mature, integrated neurons. Varying graft timing post-injury enabled us to attribute repair to both neuroprotection and circuit replacement. These findings highlight strategies to improve the efficiency of stem cell grafts for brain repair.

History

Journal

Cell Reports

Volume

20

Issue

8

Start page

1964

End page

1977

Total pages

14

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 The Authors. Creative Commons License.

Former Identifier

2006077328

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-09-13

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