Cargando…

Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine

Axonal demyelination is a consistent pathological sequel to chronic brain and spinal cord injuries and disorders that slows or disrupts impulse conduction, causing further functional loss. Since oligodendroglial progenitors are present in the demyelinated areas, failure of remyelination may be due t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jiang, Shucui, Ballerini, Patrizia, Buccella, Silvana, Giuliani, Patricia, Jiang, Cai, Huang, Xinjie, Rathbone, Michel P.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Netherlands 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2246001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18368534
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11302-007-9093-8
_version_ 1782150703810084864
author Jiang, Shucui
Ballerini, Patrizia
Buccella, Silvana
Giuliani, Patricia
Jiang, Cai
Huang, Xinjie
Rathbone, Michel P.
author_facet Jiang, Shucui
Ballerini, Patrizia
Buccella, Silvana
Giuliani, Patricia
Jiang, Cai
Huang, Xinjie
Rathbone, Michel P.
author_sort Jiang, Shucui
collection PubMed
description Axonal demyelination is a consistent pathological sequel to chronic brain and spinal cord injuries and disorders that slows or disrupts impulse conduction, causing further functional loss. Since oligodendroglial progenitors are present in the demyelinated areas, failure of remyelination may be due to lack of sufficient proliferation and differentiation of oligodendroglial progenitors. Guanosine stimulates proliferation and differentiation of many types of cells in vitro and exerts neuroprotective effects in the central nervous system (CNS). Five weeks after chronic traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI), when there is no ongoing recovery of function, intraperitoneal administration of guanosine daily for 2 weeks enhanced functional improvement correlated with the increase in myelination in the injured cord. Emphasis was placed on analysis of oligodendrocytes and NG2-positive (NG2+) cells, an endogenous cell population that may be involved in oligodendrocyte replacement. There was an increase in cell proliferation (measured by bromodeoxyuridine staining) that was attributable to an intensification in progenitor cells (NG2+ cells) associated with an increase in mature oligodendrocytes (determined by Rip+ staining). The numbers of astroglia increased at all test times after administration of guanosine whereas microglia only increased in the later stages (14 days). Injected guanosine and its breakdown product guanine accumulated in the spinal cords; there was more guanine than guanosine detected. We conclude that functional improvement and remyelination after systemic administration of guanosine is due to the effect of guanosine/guanine on the proliferation of adult progenitor cells and their maturation into myelin-forming cells. This raises the possibility that administration of guanosine may be useful in the treatment of spinal cord injury or demyelinating diseases such as multiple sclerosis where quiescent oligodendroglial progenitors exist in demyelinated plaques.
format Text
id pubmed-2246001
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher Springer Netherlands
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-22460012008-02-27 Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine Jiang, Shucui Ballerini, Patrizia Buccella, Silvana Giuliani, Patricia Jiang, Cai Huang, Xinjie Rathbone, Michel P. Purinergic Signal Original Article Axonal demyelination is a consistent pathological sequel to chronic brain and spinal cord injuries and disorders that slows or disrupts impulse conduction, causing further functional loss. Since oligodendroglial progenitors are present in the demyelinated areas, failure of remyelination may be due to lack of sufficient proliferation and differentiation of oligodendroglial progenitors. Guanosine stimulates proliferation and differentiation of many types of cells in vitro and exerts neuroprotective effects in the central nervous system (CNS). Five weeks after chronic traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI), when there is no ongoing recovery of function, intraperitoneal administration of guanosine daily for 2 weeks enhanced functional improvement correlated with the increase in myelination in the injured cord. Emphasis was placed on analysis of oligodendrocytes and NG2-positive (NG2+) cells, an endogenous cell population that may be involved in oligodendrocyte replacement. There was an increase in cell proliferation (measured by bromodeoxyuridine staining) that was attributable to an intensification in progenitor cells (NG2+ cells) associated with an increase in mature oligodendrocytes (determined by Rip+ staining). The numbers of astroglia increased at all test times after administration of guanosine whereas microglia only increased in the later stages (14 days). Injected guanosine and its breakdown product guanine accumulated in the spinal cords; there was more guanine than guanosine detected. We conclude that functional improvement and remyelination after systemic administration of guanosine is due to the effect of guanosine/guanine on the proliferation of adult progenitor cells and their maturation into myelin-forming cells. This raises the possibility that administration of guanosine may be useful in the treatment of spinal cord injury or demyelinating diseases such as multiple sclerosis where quiescent oligodendroglial progenitors exist in demyelinated plaques. Springer Netherlands 2008-01-08 2008-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2246001/ /pubmed/18368534 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11302-007-9093-8 Text en © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2007
spellingShingle Original Article
Jiang, Shucui
Ballerini, Patrizia
Buccella, Silvana
Giuliani, Patricia
Jiang, Cai
Huang, Xinjie
Rathbone, Michel P.
Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine
title Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine
title_full Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine
title_fullStr Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine
title_full_unstemmed Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine
title_short Remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine
title_sort remyelination after chronic spinal cord injury is associated with proliferation of endogenous adult progenitor cells after systemic administration of guanosine
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2246001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18368534
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11302-007-9093-8
work_keys_str_mv AT jiangshucui remyelinationafterchronicspinalcordinjuryisassociatedwithproliferationofendogenousadultprogenitorcellsaftersystemicadministrationofguanosine
AT ballerinipatrizia remyelinationafterchronicspinalcordinjuryisassociatedwithproliferationofendogenousadultprogenitorcellsaftersystemicadministrationofguanosine
AT buccellasilvana remyelinationafterchronicspinalcordinjuryisassociatedwithproliferationofendogenousadultprogenitorcellsaftersystemicadministrationofguanosine
AT giulianipatricia remyelinationafterchronicspinalcordinjuryisassociatedwithproliferationofendogenousadultprogenitorcellsaftersystemicadministrationofguanosine
AT jiangcai remyelinationafterchronicspinalcordinjuryisassociatedwithproliferationofendogenousadultprogenitorcellsaftersystemicadministrationofguanosine
AT huangxinjie remyelinationafterchronicspinalcordinjuryisassociatedwithproliferationofendogenousadultprogenitorcellsaftersystemicadministrationofguanosine
AT rathbonemichelp remyelinationafterchronicspinalcordinjuryisassociatedwithproliferationofendogenousadultprogenitorcellsaftersystemicadministrationofguanosine