Title: Cardiac channelopathy and functional study
1 2Young at heart Evidence for cardiomyocyte
renewal in humans
- Carbon14-dated age of cardiomyocytes
- Cardiomyocytes renewed with a gradual decrease
from 1 turning over annually at the age of 25,
to 0.45 at the age of 75. Fewer than 50 of
cardiomyocytes are exchanged during a normal life
span -
Bergmann et al. 2009, Science
3Nuclear weapons and neurogenesisno more cortical
neurons in normal adults
How about after stroke ?
Bhardwaj et al. 2006, PNAS
4Barriers restrain CNS regeneration
- Neuronal death
- Glial cells inhibit nerve growth
- Most neural stem cells are constrained
- Few exceptions in lower vertebrates and in
olfactory pathway and hippocampus in mammals
5Plasticity of adult human brain
Ward NS et al., Brain, 2003
6Spontaneous changes in brain after stroke
Cramer, 08, Annals of Neurology
7Consequence of hypoxia-ischemia
- Features of energy metabolism in brain
- High metabolic rate
- Limited intrinsic energy stores
- Dependence on aerobic metabolism of glucose
- Within seconds, ATP level fall, lactic acidosis
- ? ion pumps dysfunction (Na/K ATPase)
- ? rundown of transmembrane ion gradients
- ? membrane depolarization
- ? voltage-sensitive ion channels open
- ? K efflux after a min, Na, Ca ion gradient lost
and influx - ? Ca overload enhance glutamate release
- ? cell death
8(No Transcript)
9Ischemic apoptosis in parallel with necrosis
- Deprivation of growth factor support
- Addition of NGF or bFGF reduce injury
- Oxidative stress
- Antioxidants glutathione, superoxide dismutase
(SOD)1 - Prolonged deficits in energy metabolism
- Increased inflammatory cytokines
- IL-1?, TNF?, TGF?
- Transgenic mice overexpressing bl2 had smaller
infarcts
10Penumbra
Lo, 2008
11Recent therapeutic developments of stroke
- Prevention
- Acute treatment
- rt-PA thrombolysis
- even for minor stroke (Gonzales et al. 2006)
- Neuroprotection
- Ebselen, anti-inflammatory selenocomound mimic
glutathione - NXY-059, antioxidant nitrogen spin trap
- Stem cell transplantation
- G-CSF, endogenous stem cell-mobilizing agent
- phase I for acute MCA stroke by Shyu et al., 2006
- Rehabilitation
- Transcranial magnectic or direct current
stimulation - Hummel Cohen 2006 Review
12tPA for brain attack !
- In US, 50 pt arrive at ER lt 1h
- In Taiwan, 50 pt arrive at ER lt 4h
- NINCDS trial in 1990s 13 more favorable
- Symptomatic ICH rate
- (no protocol violation) 4 (violation) 8
- lt 3 of patients currently treated in US
- lt 2 of patients currently treated in Taiwan
- Increase likelihood of return to normal by 30
13Carotid endarterectomy or stent angioplasty
- Severe (gt 70) carotid stenosis in symptomatic
patients - Moderate (50-69) stenosis depend on age,
comorbidities, symptoms - For asymptomatic patients, only recommend for gt
80 carotid stenosis
14Types of cell therapy for CNS diseases
- Peripheral nerve grafts (Schawann cells)
- Olfactory ensheathing glia
- Stem/ progenitors cells
- Adult bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells
- Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from skin
fibroblasts - key pluripotency genes Oct-4, SOX2, c-Myc, Klf4
- Endogenous neural progenitor cells
15Critical issues for stem cell therapy
- What is a good source of stem cells for neural
repair ? (effective obtainable) - What factors stimulate stem cells to home
(migrate) to sites of injury? - What cues are needed for stem cells to
differentiate into the desired cell type? - Limited graft survival
- Avoid transplanting undifferentiated cells that
cause tumors (purification)
16Astrocyte-like stem cells in subventricular zone
Ependymal cells
Slowly dividing GFAP
Johansson et al., Cell, 9625-34, 1999. Doetsch
et al., Cell, 97703-16, 1999.
17Endogenous neuronal replacement after stroke in
adult rats
No neurogenesis in the cortex! Arvidsson et
al., Nat Med 2002
18Expanding endogenous stem cells
- Adult NG2 oligodendrocyte precursors
- generate functional neurons and glia in vitro
- After selective elimination of cortical neurons,
some endogenous neural precursors proliferated
and incorporated BrdU, migrated to the injury
site, most are glia - Infusion of growth factors
- Epidermal growth factor
- Sonic hedgehog
- Antagonize inhibitory micro-environment
19De-differentiation reprogram to youth
- Irreversible differentiation and germ layer
restriction can be broken by extracellular cues,
especially following injury and in cell culture - First evidence of de-differentiation in
vertebrate cells came from studies of urodeles
and avians - Regenerated limb following limb amputation in
urodeles (Brockes 1997, Brockes Kumar 2002) - Newly formed lens after resection in salamander
(Eguchi Kodama 1993, Stone 1967)
20De-differentiation in mammals
- Schwann cells de-differentiated into precursors,
proliferate, and redifferentiate after peripheral
nerve injury (Brockes Kumar 2002) - Oligodendrocyte precursor cells can produce
neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes in
vitro (Kondo Raff 2000) - Precursor-to-stem cell conversion
- In intestinal crypt (Marshman et al. 2002)
- EGF convert transit-amplifying precursors in the
adult brain into stem cells (Doetsch et al. 2002)
21Bone marrow stem cells not restricted to the
blood cell lineage
- Adult bone marrow stem cells (BMSC) give rise to
cells of all three germ layers, including neural
cells in vitro - Some transplanted BMSC in the brain had
characteristics of macrophage/microglia,
astrocytes, neurons? - Tissue injury may recruit BMSC to additional cell
types - mdx muscular dystrophy mice BMSC? myocytes
22Immunosuppressive properties of mesenchymal stem
cells
Nauta and Fibbe. 2007, Blood
23CNS entry of peripherally injected umbilical cord
blood cells is not required for neuroprotection
in stroke
Borlongan et al., 2004, Stroke
24Brain cells may be derived from non-neural stem
cells ?
- Transdifferentiated cells from one primary germ
lineage to another ? - Bone marrow SC give rise to astrocytes
- Umbilical cord SC form neurons and glia
- Adult NSC reconstitute hematopoietic system
- Controversies concerning plasticity of bone
marrow and hematopoietic SC (Castro et al., 2002
Wagers et al., 2002) - Few differentiated cells present in the graft,
most derived from cell fusion most suggest
trophic supply that facilitate endogenous repair
process
25Neural stem cells differ from those in other
systems
- Unlike hematopoietic system, the nervous system
is largely formed during early development - Unlike epithelial system, neurons form intricate
connections over long distances
26Neuron-like morphology?
- Reevaluation of in vitro differentiation of bone
marrow stromal cells Disruption of actin
cytoskeleton induces rapid morphological changes
and mimics neuronal phenotype (Neuhuber et al.,
2004) - Its unclear if neurons can be differentiated
from any source other than neural stem cells and
ES cells in vivo
27Grafted neural stem cells develop into functional
pyramidal neurons
Englund et al., 2002
28 Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPS)
- Promising alternative of embryonic stem cells
(ES), Overexpression of OCT4, SOX2, KLF4 and
C-MYC, or Nanog and Lin 28 (Takahashi and
Yamanaka, 2006 Okita et al., 2007 Wernig et
al., 2007 Yu et al., 2007) - Chimera or differentiate into 3 germ layers (Park
et al., 2007 Takahashi et al., 2007) - Disease-specific iPS provide resources for
disease investigation and drug development (Park
et al., 2008) - iPS cells from patients with ALS can be
differentiated into motor neurons (Dimos et al.,
2008) - Transplantation of neural precursor cells derived
from iPS cells functional integration in the
fetal rat brain, enhance functional recovery in
Parkinsonism rats (Wernig et al., 2008)
29A fresh look of iPS
Yamanaka, 2009, Cell
30Mechanisms of cell therapy-mediated recovery
- Trophic factors and reduce death of host cells
- VEGF, GDNF, FGF, BDNF
- Increased neovascularization
- Attenuation of inflammation
- T- cells inhibition
- Induce host plasticity
- Neurogenesis
- Recruitment of endogenous progenitors
- Neuronal replacement and functional integration
31Adverse effects of cell therapy
- Cell-related
- Tumorigenic
- Graft rejection
- Allodynia (Hofstetter et al. 2005)
- Procedure-related
- Intracranial hemorrhage during stereotactic
transplantation without general anesthesia - Infection
32Post-stroke neuroplasticity
- Corticospinal excitability decreased at the
lesion - Weakened intracortical inhibition and
facilitation in the ipsilesional hemisphere
Swayne et al., Cerebral cortex, 2008
33Strategies of brain stimulation after stroke
Hummel and Cohen, 2006, Lancet Neurology
34 After-effects of repetitive transcranial
stimulation
- Short-term effects (minutes)
- Shifting ionic balance
- Short-term synaptic plasticity
- Neurotransmitter release
- Long-lasting effects (hours)
- Long-term depression (LTD)
- and potentiation (LTP)
- Induced gene expression
- Regulation of postsynaptic receptors (ex AMPA,
NMDA, GABA)
Ridding Rothwell, Nature Rev, 2007