Neurobiology of Disease (Oct 2005)

Transplantation of neural cells derived from retinoic acid-treated cynomolgus monkey embryonic stem cells successfully improved motor function of hemiplegic mice with experimental brain injury

  • Ritsuko Ikeda,
  • Manae S. Kurokawa,
  • Shunmei Chiba,
  • Hideshi Yoshikawa,
  • Michiko Ide,
  • Mamoru Tadokoro,
  • Shinji Nito,
  • Norio Nakatsuji,
  • Yasushi Kondoh,
  • Ken Nagata,
  • Takuo Hashimoto,
  • Noboru Suzuki

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 38 – 48

Abstract

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We induced neural cells by treating cynomolgus monkey embryonic stem (ES) cells with retinoic acid. The treated cells mainly expressed βIIItubulin. They further differentiated into neurons expressing neurofilament middle chain (NFM) in elongated axons. Half of the cells differentiated into Islet1+ motoneurons in vitro. The monkey ES-derived neural cells were transplanted to hemiplegic mice with experimental brain injury mimicking stroke. The neural cells that had grafted into periventricular area of the mice distributed extensively over the injured cortex. Some of the transplanted cells expressed the neural stem/progenitor marker nestin 2 days after transplantation. The cells expressed markers characteristic of mature motoneurons 28 days after transplantation. Mice with the neural cell graft gradually recovered motor function, whereas control animals remained hemiplegic. This is the first demonstration that neural cells derived from nonhuman primate ES cells have the ability to restore motor function in an animal model of brain injury.

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