Thrombin Preconditioning Improves the Therapeutic Efficacy of Mesenchymal Stem Cells in Severe Intraventricular Hemorrhage Induced Neonatal Rats.
So Yeon JungYoung Eun KimWon Soon ParkSo Yoon AhnDong Kyung SungSe In SungKyeung-Min JooSeong Gi KimYun Sil ChangPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Severe intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) remains a major cause of high mortality and morbidity in extremely preterm infants. Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) transplantation is a possible therapeutic option, and development of therapeutics with enhanced efficacy is necessary. This study investigated whether thrombin preconditioning improves the therapeutic efficacy of human Wharton's jelly-derived MSC transplantation for severe neonatal IVH, using a rat model. Severe neonatal IVH was induced by injecting 150 μL blood into each lateral ventricle on postnatal day (P) 4 in Sprague-Dawley rats. After 2 days (P6), naïve MSCs or thrombin-preconditioned MSCs (1 × 10 5 /10 μL) were transplanted intraventricularly. After behavioral tests, brain tissues and cerebrospinal fluid of P35 rats were obtained for histological and biochemical analyses, respectively. Thrombin-preconditioned MSC transplantation significantly reduced IVH-induced ventricular dilatation on in vivo magnetic resonance imaging, which was coincident with attenuations of reactive gliosis, cell death, and the number of activated microglia and levels of inflammatory cytokines after IVH induction, compared to naïve MSC transplantation. In the behavioral tests, the sensorimotor and memory functions significantly improved after transplantation of thrombin-preconditioned MSCs, compared to naïve MSCs. Overall, thrombin preconditioning significantly improves the therapeutic potential and more effectively attenuates brain injury, including progressive ventricular dilatation, gliosis, cell death, inflammation, and neurobehavioral functional impairment, in newborn rats with induced severe IVH than does naïve MSC transplantation.
Keyphrases
- mesenchymal stem cells
- umbilical cord
- cell death
- cell therapy
- brain injury
- preterm infants
- drug induced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- early onset
- cerebral ischemia
- diabetic rats
- high glucose
- bone marrow
- heart failure
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- oxidative stress
- endothelial cells
- left ventricular
- multiple sclerosis
- inflammatory response
- pulmonary hypertension
- small molecule
- functional connectivity
- type diabetes
- minimally invasive
- computed tomography
- resting state
- cardiovascular disease
- spinal cord injury
- mass spectrometry
- neuropathic pain
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- stress induced
- coronary artery disease
- atrial fibrillation
- high resolution
- white matter
- contrast enhanced