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  • Human glial progenitor engraftment and gene expression is independent of the ALS environment.

Human glial progenitor engraftment and gene expression is independent of the ALS environment.

Experimental neurology (2014-12-20)
Amanda M Haidet-Phillips, Arpitha Doreswamy, Sarah K Gross, Xiaopei Tang, James T Campanelli, Nicholas J Maragakis
ABSTRACT

Although Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a motor neuron disease, basic research studies have highlighted that astrocytes contribute to the disease process. Therefore, strategies which replace the diseased astrocyte population with healthy astrocytes may protect against motor neuron degeneration. Our studies have sought to evaluate astrocyte replacement using glial-restricted progenitors (GRPs), which are lineage-restricted precursors capable of differentiating into astrocytes after transplantation. The goal of our current study was to evaluate how transplantation to the diseased ALS spinal cord versus a healthy, wild-type spinal cord may affect human GRP engraftment and selected gene expression. Human GRPs were transplanted into the spinal cord of either an ALS mouse model or wild-type littermate mice. Mice were sacrificed for analysis at either the onset of disease course or at the endstage of disease. The transplanted GRPs were analyzed by immunohistochemistry and NanoString gene profiling which showed no gross differences in the engraftment or gene expression of the cells. Our data indicate that human glial progenitor engraftment and gene expression is independent of the neurodegenerative ALS spinal cord environment. These findings are of interest given that human GRPs are currently in clinical development for spinal cord transplantation into ALS patients.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein Antibody, Chemicon®, from chicken
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Nuclei Antibody, clone 235-1, clone 235-1, Chemicon®, from mouse
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Olig-2 Antibody, Chemicon®, from rabbit