1. CNS-derived neural progenitor cells for gene transfer of nerve growth factor to the adult rat brain: complete rescue of axotomized cholinergic neurons after transplantation into the septum.
- Author
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Martínez-Serrano A, Lundberg C, Horellou P, Fischer W, Bentlage C, Campbell K, McKay RD, Mallet J, and Björklund A
- Subjects
- Animals, Axons physiology, Base Sequence, Cell Line, Female, Molecular Probes genetics, Molecular Sequence Data, Moloney murine leukemia virus genetics, Nerve Growth Factors metabolism, Nerve Growth Factors physiology, Neurons transplantation, Parasympathetic Nervous System cytology, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Septum Pellucidum physiology, Brain physiology, Central Nervous System cytology, Gene Transfer Techniques, Nerve Growth Factors genetics, Neurons physiology, Stem Cells physiology
- Abstract
A CNS-derived conditionally immortalized temperature-sensitive neural progenitor (CINP) cell line was used to generate NGF-secreting cells suitable for intracerebral transplantation. The cells were transduced by repeated retroviral infection, using a vector containing the mouse NGF cDNA under the control of the LTR promoter. Subcloning at the permissive temperature (33 degrees C) identified a highly NGF-secreting clone (NGF-CINP), which contained multiple copies of the transgene and released NGF at a rate of 2 ng/hr/10(5) cells in vitro, both at 33 and 37 degrees C, which was approximately 1 order of magnitude higher than what was possible to achieve in the heterogeneously infected cell cultures. After transplantation to the brain, the NGF-CINPs differentiated into cells with a predominant glia-like morphology and migrated for a distance of 1-1.5 mm from the implantation site into the surrounding host tissue, without any signs of overgrowth and tumor formation. Grafts of NGF-CINP cells implanted into the septum of adult rats with complete fimbria-fornix lesion blocked over 90% of the cholinergic cell loss in the medial septum and grafts placed in the intact striatum induced accumulation of low-affinity NGF receptor positive fibers around the implantation site. Expression of the NGF transgene in vivo was demonstrated by RT-PCR at 2 weeks after grafting. It is concluded that the immortalized neural progenitors have a number of advantageous properties that make them highly useful experimental tools for gene transfer to the adult CNS.
- Published
- 1995