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    Brian Daley

    The expression of soluble growth and survival promoting factors by neural precursor cells (NPCs) is suggested to be a prominent mechanism underlying the protective and regenerative effects of these cells after transplantation.... more
    The expression of soluble growth and survival promoting factors by neural precursor cells (NPCs) is suggested to be a prominent mechanism underlying the protective and regenerative effects of these cells after transplantation. Nevertheless, how and to what extent specific NPC-expressed factors contribute to therapeutic effects is not well understood. Using RNA silencing, the current study investigated the roles of two donor NPC molecules, namely glial cell-line derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) and sonic hedgehog (SHH), in the protection of substantia nigra dopamine neurons in rats treated with 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA). Analyses indicate that as opposed to the knock-down of GDNF, SHH inhibition caused a profound decline in nigrostriatal neuroprotection. Further, SHH silencing also curbed endogenous neurogenesis and the migration of host brdU+/dcx+ neural precursors into the striatum, which was present in the animals receiving control or GDNF silenced NPCs. A change in graft phenotype, mainly reflected by a reduced proportion of undifferentiated nestin+ cells, as well as a significantly greater host microglial activity, suggested an important role for these processes in the attenuation of neuroprotection and neurogenesis upon SHH silencing. Overall these studies reveal core mechanisms fundamental to grafted NPC-based therapeutic effects, and delineate the particular contributions of two graft-expressed molecules, SHH and GDNF, in mediating midbrain dopamine neuron protection, and host plasticity after NPC transplantation.
    The availability, storage, testing, and transportation of donor tissue are significant practical problems associated with the potential use of grafted neural cell replacements in human neurodegenerative diseases. This chapter describes... more
    The availability, storage, testing, and transportation of donor tissue are significant practical problems associated with the potential use of grafted neural cell replacements in human neurodegenerative diseases. This chapter describes the applicability of cryopreservation on fetal rat and non-human primate mesencephalic neurons that is initially tested on rat ventral midbrain tissue, and subsequently applied to non-human primate midbrain tissue. Direct comparison of fresh to frozen-stored rat tissue in culture and intrastriatal grafts indicates that cryopreservation reduces the number of cells available for use, but those neurons, which tolerate the procedure appear typical in morphology. However, cryopreservation of fetal monkey dopamine neurons yields viable cells in both culture and intrastriatal grafts. While cryopreserved brain tissue yields fewer cells, dopamine neurons that tolerate freeze-storage survive and grow in culture and neural grafts. Thus, freeze-storage of develop...
    In addition to alleviating depression, long-term adaptive changes induced by antidepressants may regulate neural plasticity in the diseased brain, providing symptomatic and disease-modifying effects in... more
    In addition to alleviating depression, long-term adaptive changes induced by antidepressants may regulate neural plasticity in the diseased brain, providing symptomatic and disease-modifying effects in Parkinson's disease. The present study investigated whether chronic treatment with a frequently prescribed tricyclic antidepressant was neuroprotective in a 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) rat model of parkinsonism. In lesioned animals, chronic amitriptyline (AMI; 5 mg/kg) treatment resulted in a significant sparing of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive (THir) neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) compared with saline treatment. Additionally, striatal fibers were preserved and functional motor deficits were attenuated. Although 6-OHDA lesions did not induce anhedonia in our model, the dose of AMI utilized had antidepressant activity as demonstrated by reduced immobility. Recent in vitro and in vivo data provide evidence that trophic factors such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) may be key mediators of the therapeutic response to antidepressants. Therefore, we investigated whether AMI mediates changes in these specific trophic factors in the intact and degenerating nigrostriatal system. Chronic AMI treatment mediates an increase in nigral BDNF both before and during ongoing degeneration, suggesting it may contribute to neuroprotection observed in vivo. However, over time, AMI reduced BDNF levels in the striatum, indicating tricyclic therapy differentially regulates trophic factors within the nigrostriatal system. Combined, these results suggest that AMI treatment attenuates dopamine neuron loss and elicits significant trophic changes relevant to dopamine neuron survival.
    In addition to alleviating depression, trophic responses produced by antidepressants may regulate neural plasticity in the diseased brain, which not only provides symptomatic benefit but also potentially slows the rate of disease... more
    In addition to alleviating depression, trophic responses produced by antidepressants may regulate neural plasticity in the diseased brain, which not only provides symptomatic benefit but also potentially slows the rate of disease progression in Parkinson's disease (PD). Recent in vitro and in vivo data provide evidence that neurotrophic factors such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) may be key mediators of the therapeutic response to antidepressants. As such, we conducted a cross-sectional time-course study to determine whether antidepressant-mediated changes in neurotrophic factors occur in relevant brain regions in response to amitriptyline (AMI) treatment before and after intrastriatal 6-hydroxydopamine (6OHDA). Adult male Wistar rats were divided into seven cohorts and given daily injections (i.p.) of AMI (5mg/kg) or saline throughout the duration of the study. In parallel, various cohorts of intact or parkinsonian animals were sacrificed at specific time points to determine the impact of AMI treatment on trophic factor levels in the intact and degenerating nigrostriatal system. The left and right hemispheres of the substantia nigra, striatum, frontal cortex, piriform cortex, hippocampus, and anterior cingulate cortex were dissected, and BDNF and GDNF levels were measured with ELISA. Results show that chronic AMI treatment elicits effects in multiple brain regions and differentially regulates levels of BDNF and GDNF depending on the region. Additionally, AMI halts the progressive degeneration of dopamine (DA) neurons elicited by an intrastriatal 6-OHDA lesion. Taken together, these results suggest that AMI treatment elicits significant trophic changes important to DA neuron survival within both the intact and degenerating nigrostriatal system.
    The present series of experiments investigated the effects of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF165) on adult rat striatal cerebrovasculature and embryonic dopamine (DA) neuron allografts in a rat model of... more
    The present series of experiments investigated the effects of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF165) on adult rat striatal cerebrovasculature and embryonic dopamine (DA) neuron allografts in a rat model of Parkinson's disease (PD). We examined VEGF165's ability to (1) alter the vascular network of the adult rat striatum, (2) influence the vascular growth of solid embryonic day 14 (E14) ventral mesencephalic (VM) grafts when placed into a VEGF-pretreated host striatum, (3) alter the function and survival of E14 VM grafts when transplanted into an adult DA-deleted striatum, and (4) influence cell survival and neurite growth in cultures of E14 VM cells. We demonstrate here that a single bolus injection of VEGF165 into the adult rat striatum significantly increases the amount of vasculature in the vicinity of the injection site in a delayed and transient manner when compared to saline controls. Transplanting solid E14 VM grafts into the VEGF165-pretreated striatum resulted in a homogeneous distribution of small blood vessels throughout the graft, a pattern that closely resembles mature adult vasculature. In contrast, grafts in the control condition contained a patchy distribution of heavily dilated vessels. Behavioral measurements indicate that VEGF pretreatment of the intrastriatal graft site accelerates recovery of amphetamine-induced rotational asymmetry in unilateral 6-OHDA lesioned rats. Unexpectedly, however, VEGF pretreatments failed to increase survival of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive (THir) neurons in the grafts. In contrast to this finding in vivo, adding VEGF165 to glial-reduced E14 rat VM cultures produced a fourfold increase in THir cell survival and a doubling in the length of THir neurites. We conclude that with the proper method of delivery, VEGF165 may prove to be one of several strategies necessary to significantly improve the survival and function of fetal VM tissue grafts.
    Neuroprotective and neurorescue effects after neural stem/precursor cell (NPC) transplantation have been reported, but the mechanisms underlying such phenomena are not well understood. Our recent findings in a rat... more
    Neuroprotective and neurorescue effects after neural stem/precursor cell (NPC) transplantation have been reported, but the mechanisms underlying such phenomena are not well understood. Our recent findings in a rat Parkinson's disease (PD) model indicate that transplantation of NPCs before a 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) insult can result in nigrostriatal protection which is associated with endogenous NPC proliferation, migration and neurogenesis. Here, we sought to determine whether the observed endogenous NPC response (i) contributes to transplanted NPC-mediated neuroprotection; and/or (ii) affects graft phenotype and function. Host Fischer 344 rats were administered the antimitotic agent cytosine-β-d-arabinofuranoside (Ara-C) to eliminate actively proliferating endogenous neural precursors before being transplanted with NPCs and treated with 6-OHDA to induce nigrostriatal degeneration. Behavioral and histological analyses demonstrate that the neuroprotective response observed in NPC transplanted animals which had not received Ara-C was significantly attenuated in animals which did receive pre-transplant Ara-C. Also, while grafts in Ara-C-treated animals showed no decrease in cell number, they exhibited significantly reduced expression of the neural stem cell regulators nestin and sonic hedgehog. In addition, inhibition of the endogenous NPC response resulted in an exaggerated host glial reaction. Overall, the study establishes for the first time that endogenous NPCs contribute to transplanted NPC-mediated therapeutic effects by affecting both grafted and mature host cells in unique ways. Thus, both endogenous and transplanted NPCs are important in creating an environment suitable for neural protection and rescue, and harnessing their synergistic interaction may lead to the optimization of cell-based therapies for PD.