Intranasal delivery of mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes reduces oxidative stress and markedly inhibits ethanol consumption and post-deprivation relapse drinking.
Fernando EzquerMaría Elena QuintanillaPaola MoralesDaniela SantapauMarcelo EzquerMarcelo Javier KoganEdison Salas-HuenuleoMario Herrera-MarschitzYedy IsraelPublished in: Addiction biology (2018)
Chronic ethanol consumption leads to brain oxidative stress and neuroinflammation, conditions known to potentiate and perpetuate each other. Several studies have shown that neuroinflammation results in increases in chronic ethanol consumption. Recent reports showed that the intra-cerebroventricular administration of mesenchymal stem cells to rats consuming alcohol chronically markedly inhibited oxidative-stress, abolished neuroinflammation and greatly reduced chronic alcohol intake and post deprivation relapse-like alcohol intake. However, the intra-cerebroventricular administration of living cells is not suitable as a treatment of a chronic condition. The present study aimed at inhibiting ethanol intake by the non-invasive intranasal administration of human mesenchymal stem cell products: exosomes, microvesicles (40 to 150 nm) with marked antioxidant activity extruded from mesenchymal stem cells. The exosome membrane can fuse with the plasma membrane of cells in different tissues, thus delivering their content intracellularly. The study showed that the weekly intranasal administration of mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes to rats consuming alcohol chronically (1) inhibited their ethanol intake by 84 percent and blunted the relapse-like 'binge' drinking that follows an alcohol deprivation period and ethanol re-access. (2) Intranasally administered exosomes were found in the brain within 24 hours; (3) fully reversed both alcohol-induced hippocampal oxidative-stress, evidenced by a lower ratio of oxidized to reduced glutathione, and neuroinflammation, shown by a reduced astrocyte activation and microglial density; and (4) increased glutamate transporter GLT1 expression in nucleus accumbens, counteracting the inhibition of glutamate transporter activity, reportedly depressed under oxidative-stress conditions. Possible translational implications are envisaged.
Keyphrases
- mesenchymal stem cells
- oxidative stress
- umbilical cord
- alcohol consumption
- induced apoptosis
- diabetic rats
- bone marrow
- cerebral ischemia
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- lps induced
- traumatic brain injury
- dna damage
- stem cells
- living cells
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- cell therapy
- cognitive impairment
- endothelial cells
- poor prognosis
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- emergency department
- weight gain
- blood brain barrier
- body mass index
- gene expression
- photodynamic therapy
- white matter
- cell cycle arrest
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- resting state
- brain injury
- long non coding rna
- spinal cord
- fluorescent probe
- heat stress