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Neural stem cells restore cognitive function in Parkinsonian macaques

Authors :
Howard M. Cooper
Karim Fifel
Colette Dehay
Julien Vezoli
Emmanuel Procyk
Florence Wianny
Pierre Savatier
Charles R.E. Wilson
Camille Lamy
Kwamivi Dzahini
Pierre Misery
Henry Kennedy
Virginie Dolmazon
Agnieszka Bernat
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Cognitive deficits as well as disorders of sleep and biological rhythms constitute non-motor symptoms that significantly impact quality of life in Parkinson’s disease patients. Few studies have evaluated the impact of cell replacement therapy on such non-motor symptoms. Here we used a multidisciplinary approach to assess the therapeutic potential of bilateral grafts of neural stem cells in a macaque model of Parkinson’s disease on both motor and non-motor markers of functional recovery. Grafts led to varying degrees of functional recovery while sham experiments did not. We show unprecedented recovery from cognitive symptoms in addition to a clear clinical motor recuperation. Motor and cognitive recovery but not circadian rhythm recovery correlated with the degree of graft integration into the host environment and with in-vivo levels of striatal dopaminergic transporters and function. This study provides empirical evidence that neural stem cells transplantation efficiently restore function at multiple levels in Parkinsonian non-human primates. We demonstrate the promising potential of multiple-sites neural stem cells grafts for Parkinson’s disease but furthermore underline the crucial importance of such multidisciplinary approaches for an effective clinical translation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........86dac027c4d2189b7ccd2f774ce9346f