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Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges

The spinal cord is unable to regenerate after injury largely due to growth‐inhibition by an inflammatory response to the injury that fails to resolve, resulting in secondary damage and cell death. An approach that prevents inhibition by attenuating the inflammatory response and promoting its resolut...

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Autores principales: Margul, Daniel J., Park, Jonghyuck, Boehler, Ryan M., Smith, Dominique R., Johnson, Mitchell A., McCreedy, Dylan A., He, Ting, Ataliwala, Aishani, Kukushliev, Todor V., Liang, Jesse, Sohrabi, Alireza, Goodman, Ashley G., Walthers, Christopher M., Shea, Lonnie D., Seidlits, Stephanie K.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5125399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27981242
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/btm2.10018
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author Margul, Daniel J.
Park, Jonghyuck
Boehler, Ryan M.
Smith, Dominique R.
Johnson, Mitchell A.
McCreedy, Dylan A.
He, Ting
Ataliwala, Aishani
Kukushliev, Todor V.
Liang, Jesse
Sohrabi, Alireza
Goodman, Ashley G.
Walthers, Christopher M.
Shea, Lonnie D.
Seidlits, Stephanie K.
author_facet Margul, Daniel J.
Park, Jonghyuck
Boehler, Ryan M.
Smith, Dominique R.
Johnson, Mitchell A.
McCreedy, Dylan A.
He, Ting
Ataliwala, Aishani
Kukushliev, Todor V.
Liang, Jesse
Sohrabi, Alireza
Goodman, Ashley G.
Walthers, Christopher M.
Shea, Lonnie D.
Seidlits, Stephanie K.
author_sort Margul, Daniel J.
collection PubMed
description The spinal cord is unable to regenerate after injury largely due to growth‐inhibition by an inflammatory response to the injury that fails to resolve, resulting in secondary damage and cell death. An approach that prevents inhibition by attenuating the inflammatory response and promoting its resolution through the transition of macrophages to anti‐inflammatory phenotypes is essential for the creation of a growth permissive microenvironment. Viral gene delivery to induce the expression of anti‐inflammatory factors provides the potential to provide localized delivery to alter the host inflammatory response. Initially, we investigated the effect of the biomaterial and viral components of the delivery system to influence the extent of cell infiltration and the phenotype of these cells. Bridge implantation reduces antigen‐presenting cell infiltration at day 7, and lentivirus addition to the bridge induces a transient increase in neutrophils in the spinal cord at day 7 and macrophages at day 14. Delivery of a lentivirus encoding IL‐10, an anti‐inflammatory factor that inhibits immune cell activation and polarizes the macrophage population towards anti‐inflammatory phenotypes, reduced neutrophil infiltration at both day 7 and day 28. Though IL‐10 lentivirus did not affect macrophages number, it skewed the macrophage population toward an anti‐inflammatory M2 phenotype and altered macrophage morphology. Additionally, IL‐10 delivery resulted in improved motor function, suggesting reduced secondary damage and increased sparing. Taken together, these results indicate that localized expression of anti‐inflammatory factors, such as IL‐10, can modulate the inflammatory response following spinal cord injury, and may be a key component of a combinatorial approach that targets the multiple barriers to regeneration and functional recovery.
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spelling pubmed-51253992016-12-13 Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges Margul, Daniel J. Park, Jonghyuck Boehler, Ryan M. Smith, Dominique R. Johnson, Mitchell A. McCreedy, Dylan A. He, Ting Ataliwala, Aishani Kukushliev, Todor V. Liang, Jesse Sohrabi, Alireza Goodman, Ashley G. Walthers, Christopher M. Shea, Lonnie D. Seidlits, Stephanie K. Bioeng Transl Med Research Reports The spinal cord is unable to regenerate after injury largely due to growth‐inhibition by an inflammatory response to the injury that fails to resolve, resulting in secondary damage and cell death. An approach that prevents inhibition by attenuating the inflammatory response and promoting its resolution through the transition of macrophages to anti‐inflammatory phenotypes is essential for the creation of a growth permissive microenvironment. Viral gene delivery to induce the expression of anti‐inflammatory factors provides the potential to provide localized delivery to alter the host inflammatory response. Initially, we investigated the effect of the biomaterial and viral components of the delivery system to influence the extent of cell infiltration and the phenotype of these cells. Bridge implantation reduces antigen‐presenting cell infiltration at day 7, and lentivirus addition to the bridge induces a transient increase in neutrophils in the spinal cord at day 7 and macrophages at day 14. Delivery of a lentivirus encoding IL‐10, an anti‐inflammatory factor that inhibits immune cell activation and polarizes the macrophage population towards anti‐inflammatory phenotypes, reduced neutrophil infiltration at both day 7 and day 28. Though IL‐10 lentivirus did not affect macrophages number, it skewed the macrophage population toward an anti‐inflammatory M2 phenotype and altered macrophage morphology. Additionally, IL‐10 delivery resulted in improved motor function, suggesting reduced secondary damage and increased sparing. Taken together, these results indicate that localized expression of anti‐inflammatory factors, such as IL‐10, can modulate the inflammatory response following spinal cord injury, and may be a key component of a combinatorial approach that targets the multiple barriers to regeneration and functional recovery. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2016-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5125399/ /pubmed/27981242 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/btm2.10018 Text en © 2016 The Authors. Bioengineering & Translational Medicine is published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The American Institute of Chemical Engineers This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Reports
Margul, Daniel J.
Park, Jonghyuck
Boehler, Ryan M.
Smith, Dominique R.
Johnson, Mitchell A.
McCreedy, Dylan A.
He, Ting
Ataliwala, Aishani
Kukushliev, Todor V.
Liang, Jesse
Sohrabi, Alireza
Goodman, Ashley G.
Walthers, Christopher M.
Shea, Lonnie D.
Seidlits, Stephanie K.
Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges
title Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges
title_full Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges
title_fullStr Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges
title_full_unstemmed Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges
title_short Reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of IL‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges
title_sort reducing neuroinflammation by delivery of il‐10 encoding lentivirus from multiple‐channel bridges
topic Research Reports
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5125399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27981242
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/btm2.10018
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