Ensheathing cells: Large scale purification from adult olfactory bulb, freeze-preservation and migration of transplanted cells in adult brain.

Abstract:

:Regenerating nerve fiber sprouts enveloped by olfactory bulb (OB) ensheathing cells (ECs) seem to escape the inhibitory influence of gliotic tissue. Accordingly, these cells may be useful for general repair of injured CNS. Relatively large numbers of ECs could be purified from confluent cultures of adult rat olfactory bulb using immunomagnetic beads. Viable ECs could be cultured and purified in good yield from OB dissected up to 18 h post-mortem. Purified ECs could be stored frozen at -75°C for at least 6 months, while maintaining 95% viability. ECs labelled with the fluorescent cell-linker PKH-26 neither shed the label nor exchanged it with other cells. The migration of labelled ECs transplanted to adult hippocampus was examined at intervals ranging from 3 h to 30 days. Active migration from the injection site was first observed 4 days after transplantation, when ECs appeared intercalated between the neurons of the hippocampal and dentate cell layers. Some ECs remained in that location after 30 days but, at that time, the olfactory glial cells could be observed in loci as distant and diverse as the laterodorsal thalamic nuclei, internal capsule, arcuate nucleus, cerebral aqueduct walls and choroid plexus. ECs seemed to have preferences for the dentate hilus, the pyramidal and granular cell layers, choroid plexus, blood vessels and putative peptidergic loci.

journal_name

Restor Neurol Neurosci

authors

Gudiño-Cabrera G,Nieto-Sampedro M

doi

10.3233/RNN-1996-10104

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

1996-01-01 00:00:00

pages

25-34

issue

1

eissn

0922-6028

issn

1878-3627

pii

T156J4653U738937

journal_volume

10

pub_type

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