Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology (Dec 2020)

Regeneration of Functional Neurons After Spinal Cord Injury via in situ NeuroD1-Mediated Astrocyte-to-Neuron Conversion

  • Brendan Puls,
  • Yan Ding,
  • Fengyu Zhang,
  • Mengjie Pan,
  • Zhuofan Lei,
  • Zifei Pei,
  • Mei Jiang,
  • Yuting Bai,
  • Cody Forsyth,
  • Morgan Metzger,
  • Tanvi Rana,
  • Lei Zhang,
  • Xiaoyun Ding,
  • Matthew Keefe,
  • Alice Cai,
  • Austin Redilla,
  • Michael Lai,
  • Kevin He,
  • Hedong Li,
  • Hedong Li,
  • Gong Chen,
  • Gong Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2020.591883
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Spinal cord injury (SCI) often leads to impaired motor and sensory functions, partially because the injury-induced neuronal loss cannot be easily replenished through endogenous mechanisms. In vivo neuronal reprogramming has emerged as a novel technology to regenerate neurons from endogenous glial cells by forced expression of neurogenic transcription factors. We have previously demonstrated successful astrocyte-to-neuron conversion in mouse brains with injury or Alzheimer's disease by overexpressing a single neural transcription factor NeuroD1. Here we demonstrate regeneration of spinal cord neurons from reactive astrocytes after SCI through AAV NeuroD1-based gene therapy. We find that NeuroD1 converts reactive astrocytes into neurons in the dorsal horn of stab-injured spinal cord with high efficiency (~95%). Interestingly, NeuroD1-converted neurons in the dorsal horn mostly acquire glutamatergic neuronal subtype, expressing spinal cord-specific markers such as Tlx3 but not brain-specific markers such as Tbr1, suggesting that the astrocytic lineage and local microenvironment affect the cell fate after conversion. Electrophysiological recordings show that the NeuroD1-converted neurons can functionally mature and integrate into local spinal cord circuitry by displaying repetitive action potentials and spontaneous synaptic responses. We further show that NeuroD1-mediated neuronal conversion can occur in the contusive SCI model with a long delay after injury, allowing future studies to further evaluate this in vivo reprogramming technology for functional recovery after SCI. In conclusion, this study may suggest a paradigm shift from classical axonal regeneration to neuronal regeneration for spinal cord repair, using in vivo astrocyte-to-neuron conversion technology to regenerate functional new neurons in the gray matter.

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