AI Article Synopsis

  • Cardiac arrest can lead to significant brain injury and high mortality rates, making treatment difficult.
  • Researchers are exploring the use of neural stem cells (NSCs) for therapy, but their effectiveness is often limited after being transplanted into the body.
  • A new study shows that using a specific monosaccharide analog (TProp) enhances the function and repair capabilities of NSCs, improving recovery in animal models after brain injury due to cardiac arrest.

Article Abstract

Cardiac arrest (CA)-induced cerebral ischemia remains challenging with high mortality and disability. Neural stem cell (NSC) engrafting is an emerging therapeutic strategy with considerable promise that, unfortunately, is severely compromised by limited cell functionality after in vivo transplantation. This groundbreaking report demonstrates that metabolic glycoengineering (MGE) using the "AcManNTProp (TProp)" monosaccharide analog stimulates the Wnt/-catenin pathway, improves cell adhesion, and enhances neuronal differentiation in human NSCs in vitro thereby substantially increasing the therapeutic potential of these cells. For the first time, MGE significantly enhances NSC efficacy for treating ischemic brain injury after asphyxia CA in rats. In particular, neurological deficit scores and neurobehavioral tests experience greater improvements when the therapeutic cells are pretreated with TProp than with "stand-alone" NSC therapy. Notably, the TProp-NSC group exhibits significantly stronger neuroprotective functions including enhanced differentiation, synaptic plasticity, and reduced microglia recruitment; furthermore, Wnt pathway agonists and inhibitors demonstrate a pivotal role for Wnt signaling in the process. These findings help establish MGE as a promising avenue for addressing current limitations associated with NSC transplantation via beneficially influencing neural regeneration and synaptic plasticity, thereby offering enhanced therapeutic options to boost brain recovery following global ischemia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11281434PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adfm.202309866DOI Listing

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