AI Article Synopsis

  • - Epilepsy makes life tough for patients, so scientists want to find better treatments to help control it.
  • - Researchers are testing special cells called Sertoli cells (SCs) to see if they can protect brain cells from damage caused by seizures in rats.
  • - The results showed that injecting SCs helped reduce brain cell damage and increased the number of healthy brain cells, suggesting that SCs could be a good way to help with epilepsy.

Article Abstract

Epilepsy significantly reduces the patient's quality of life, and we still need to develop new therapeutic approaches to control it. Transplantation of cells such as Sertoli cells (SCs), having a potent ability to release a variety of growth and immunoprotective substances, have made them a potential candidate to deal with neurological diseases like epilepsy. Hence, this study aims to evaluate whether SCs transplant effectively protects the hippocampus astrocytes and neurons to oppose seizure damage. For this purpose, the effects of bilateral intrahippocampal transplantation of SCs were investigated on the rats with the pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) induced seizure. After one-month, post-graft analysis was performed regarding behavior, immunohistopathology, and the distribution of the hippocampal cells. Our findings showed SCs transplantation reduced astrogliosis, astrocytes process length, the number of branches, and intersections distal to the soma of the hippocampus in the seizure group. In rats with grafted SCs, there was a drop in the hippocampal caspase-3 expression. Moreover, the SCs showed another protective impact, as shown by an improvement in pyramidal neurons' number and spatial distribution. The findings suggested that SCs transplantation can potently modify astrocytes' reactivation and inflammatory responses.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11011-023-01309-0DOI Listing

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