Cell Reports (Aug 2017)

Peptide-Based Scaffolds Support Human Cortical Progenitor Graft Integration to Reduce Atrophy and Promote Functional Repair in a Model of Stroke

  • Fahad A. Somaa,
  • Ting-Yi Wang,
  • Jonathan C. Niclis,
  • Kiara F. Bruggeman,
  • Jessica A. Kauhausen,
  • Haoyao Guo,
  • Stuart McDougall,
  • Richard J. Williams,
  • David R. Nisbet,
  • Lachlan H. Thompson,
  • Clare L. Parish

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.07.069
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 8
pp. 1964 – 1977

Abstract

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Stem cell transplants offer significant hope for brain repair following ischemic damage. Pre-clinical work suggests that therapeutic mechanisms may be multi-faceted, incorporating bone-fide circuit reconstruction by transplanted neurons, but also protection/regeneration of host circuitry. Here, we engineered hydrogel scaffolds to form “bio-bridges” within the necrotic lesion cavity, providing physical and trophic support to transplanted human embryonic stem cell-derived cortical progenitors, as well as residual host neurons. Scaffolds were fabricated by the self-assembly of peptides for a laminin-derived epitope (IKVAV), thereby mimicking the brain’s major extracellular protein. Following focal ischemia in rats, scaffold-supported cell transplants induced progressive motor improvements over 9 months, compared to cell- or scaffold-only implants. These grafts were larger, exhibited greater neuronal differentiation, and showed enhanced electrophysiological properties reflective of mature, integrated neurons. Varying graft timing post-injury enabled us to attribute repair to both neuroprotection and circuit replacement. These findings highlight strategies to improve the efficiency of stem cell grafts for brain repair.

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