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Genetically modified macrophages accelerate myelin repair

Authors :
Neurociencias
Neurozientziak
Aigrot, Marie Stephane
Barthelemy, Clara
Moyon, Sarah
Dufayet-Chaffaud, Gaelle
Izagirre Urizar, Leire
Gillet-Legrand, Beatrix
Tada, Satoru
Bayón Cordero, Laura
Chara Ventura, Juan Carlos
Matute Almau, Carlos José
Cartier, Nathalie
Lubetzki, Catherine
Tepavčević, Vanja
Neurociencias
Neurozientziak
Aigrot, Marie Stephane
Barthelemy, Clara
Moyon, Sarah
Dufayet-Chaffaud, Gaelle
Izagirre Urizar, Leire
Gillet-Legrand, Beatrix
Tada, Satoru
Bayón Cordero, Laura
Chara Ventura, Juan Carlos
Matute Almau, Carlos José
Cartier, Nathalie
Lubetzki, Catherine
Tepavčević, Vanja
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

[EN] Preventing neurodegeneration-associated disability progression in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) remains an unmet therapeutic need. As remyelination prevents axonal degeneration, promoting this process in patients might enhance neuroprotection. In demyelinating mouse lesions, local overexpression of semaphorin 3F (Sema3F), an oligodendrocyte progenitor cell (OPC) attractant, increases remyelination. However, molecular targeting to MS lesions is a challenge. A clinically relevant paradigm for delivering Sema3F to demyelinating lesions could be to use blood-derived macrophages as vehicles. Thus, we chose transplantation of genetically modified hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) as means of obtaining chimeric mice with circulating Sema3F-overexpressing monocytes. We demonstrated that Sema3F-transduced HSCs stimulate OPC migration in a neuropilin 2 (Nrp2, Sema3F receptor)-dependent fashion, which was conserved in middle-aged OPCs. While demyelinating lesions induced in mice with Sema3F-expressing blood cells showed no changes in inflammation and OPC survival, OPC recruitment was enhanced which accelerated the onset of remyelination. Our results provide a proof of concept that blood cells, particularly monocytes/macrophages, can be used to deliver pro-remyelinating agents "at the right time and place," suggesting novel means for remyelination-promoting strategies in MS.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
This work was supported by the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research (INSERM), French National Research Agency (ANR, project Stemimus ANR-12-BSV4-0002-02), the European Leukodystrophy Association (ELA, project 2016-004C5B), NeurATRIS, the program "Investissements d'avenir" (ANR-10-IAIHU-06), CIBERNED (CB06/0005/0076), and Gobierno Vasco (IT1203-19). VT was a recipient of the Spanish Ministry of Economy Young Investigator Grant (SAF2015-74332-JIN)., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1346952069
Document Type :
Electronic Resource