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Regional energy metabolism following short-term neural stem cell transplantation into the injured spinal cord.

Authors :
Mautes, Angelika
Liu, Jiankun
Brandewiede, Jörg
Manville, Jérome
Snyder, Evan
Schachner, Melitta
Source :
Journal of Molecular Neuroscience; Sep2004, Vol. 24 Issue 2, p227-236, 10p
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Stem cells have been shown to partly restore central nervous system (CNS) function after transplantation into the injured CNS. However, little is known about their influence on acute energy metabolism after spinal cord injury. The present study was designed to analyze regional changes in energy metabolites. Young adult mice were subjected to laminectomy with subsequent hemisection at the L2/3 vertebral level. Immediately thereafter a stable clone of murine neural stem cells (NSCs) was injected into the lesion site. After 4 and 24 h, spinal cords were removed and ATP, glucose, and lactate were analyzed by a bioluminescence approach in serial sections and compared to a laminectomized (intact control), hemisected-only or hemisected vehicle-injected control group. At both time points, ATP content of the hemisected group in the tissue segments adjacent to the lesion was increased when compared to the laminectomized control. At the lesion site ATP content decreased significantly at 24 h in the cell-transplanted group when compared to the laminectomized control group. Glucose content decreased at the lesion site and in segments adjacent to the lesion at both time points and in all experimental groups when compared to the laminectomized control group. Lactate content decreased significantly at 4 h in the caudal segments of the vehicle-injected group and in both adjacent segments of the transplanted group when compared to the laminectomized control. At the lesion site, lactate content decreased significantly at 4 and 24 h in the cell-transplanted group, when compared to the laminectomized control. The area of ATP decline at the lesion site 24 h postinjury was significantly lower in the vehicle control group as compared to the hemisected or transplanted group. The decrease in glucose combined with an increase in ATP in the lesion-adjacent segments may indicate that the tissue responds with an increased use of glucose to support itself with sufficient ATP. The significant decrease in glucose, lactate, and ATP in the cell-transplanted group at 24 h may indicate a high metabolic need of the stem cells. The lower area of ATP decline 24 h after vehicle administration suggests that the vehicle solution washes out toxic mediators, thus ameliorating hemisection-dependent secondary tissue damage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08958696
Volume :
24
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Molecular Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
49541741
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1385/JMN:24:2:227