AI Article Synopsis

  • Over the last 20 years, various fibroblast-like cell types, including mesenchymal stem cells, have been explored for treating severe brain injuries and diseases through cellular therapies.
  • Current understanding of these therapies emphasizes the immune-modulating and regenerative effects of stromal cell transplantation, yet many questions remain about how these processes work in the body.
  • This study proposes a comprehensive model detailing the interactions and events following fibroblast-like cell grafting in the rodent brain during the crucial first 10 days post-transplantation, highlighting the roles of cell death, immune cell recruitment, and new blood vessel formation at the graft site.

Article Abstract

Over the past two decades, several cell types with fibroblast-like morphology, including mesenchymal stem/stromal cells, but also other adult, embryonic and extra-embryonic fibroblast-like cells, have been brought forward in the search for cellular therapies to treat severe brain injuries and/or diseases. Although current views in regenerative medicine are highly focused on the immune modulating and regenerative properties of stromal cell transplantation in vivo, many open questions remain regarding their true mode of action. In this perspective, this study integrates insights gathered over the past 10 years to formulate a unifying model of the cellular events that accompany fibroblast-like cell grafting in the rodent brain. Cellular interactions are discussed step-by-step, starting from the day of implantation up to 10 days after transplantation. During the short period that precedes stable settlement of autologous/syngeneic stromal cell grafts, there is a complex interplay between hypoxia-mediated cell death of grafted cells, neutrophil invasion, microglia and macrophage recruitment, astrocyte activation and neo-angiogenesis within the stromal cell graft site. Consequently, it is speculated that regenerative processes following cell therapeutic intervention in the CNS are not only modulated by soluble factors secreted by grafted stromal cells (bystander hypothesis), but also by in vivo inflammatory processes following stromal cell grafting. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/term.2188DOI Listing

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