Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts

Abstract Background Cell transplantation-based treatments for neurological disease are promising, yet graft rejection remains a major barrier to successful regenerative therapies. Our group and others have shown that long-lasting tolerance of transplanted stem cells can be achieved in the brain with...

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Main Authors: Rui Wang, Chengyan Chu, Zhiliang Wei, Lin Chen, Jiadi Xu, Yajie Liang, Miroslaw Janowski, Robert D. Stevens, Piotr Walczak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:Journal of Neuroinflammation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-021-02152-9
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spelling doaj-46b259a4337b422788c1b17cbe55e20c2021-05-02T11:16:18ZengBMCJournal of Neuroinflammation1742-20942021-04-0118111110.1186/s12974-021-02152-9Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allograftsRui Wang0Chengyan Chu1Zhiliang Wei2Lin Chen3Jiadi Xu4Yajie Liang5Miroslaw Janowski6Robert D. Stevens7Piotr Walczak8Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins UniversityRussell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins UniversityRussell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins UniversityRussell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins UniversityRussell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins UniversityDiagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Maryland BaltimoreDiagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Maryland BaltimoreRussell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins UniversityDiagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Maryland BaltimoreAbstract Background Cell transplantation-based treatments for neurological disease are promising, yet graft rejection remains a major barrier to successful regenerative therapies. Our group and others have shown that long-lasting tolerance of transplanted stem cells can be achieved in the brain with systemic application of monoclonal antibodies blocking co-stimulation signaling. However, it is unknown if subsequent injury and the blood-brain barrier breach could expose the transplanted cells to systemic immune system spurring fulminant rejection and fatal encephalitis. Therefore, we investigated whether delayed traumatic brain injury (TBI) could trigger graft rejection. Methods Glial-restricted precursor cells (GRPs) were intracerebroventricularly transplanted in immunocompetent neonatal mice and co-stimulation blockade (CoB) was applied 0, 2, 4, and 6 days post-grafting. Bioluminescence imaging (BLI) was performed to monitor the grafted cell survival. Mice were subjected to TBI 12 weeks post-transplantation. MRI and open-field test were performed to assess the brain damage and behavioral change, respectively. The animals were decapitated at week 16 post-transplantation, and the brains were harvested. The survival and distribution of grafted cells were verified from brain sections. Hematoxylin and eosin staining (HE) was performed to observe TBI-induced brain legion, and neuroinflammation was evaluated immunohistochemically. Results BLI showed that grafted GRPs were rejected within 4 weeks after transplantation without CoB, while CoB administration resulted in long-term survival of allografts. BLI signal had a steep rise following TBI and subsequently declined but remained higher than the preinjury level. Open-field test showed TBI-induced anxiety for all animals but neither CoB nor GRP transplantation intensified the symptom. HE and MRI demonstrated a reduction in TBI-induced lesion volume in GRP-transplanted mice compared with non-transplanted mice. Brain sections further validated the survival of grafted GRPs and showed more GRPs surrounding the injured tissue. Furthermore, the brains of post-TBI shiverer mice had increased activation of microglia and astrocytes compared to post-TBI wildtype mice, but infiltration of CD45+ leukocytes remained low. Conclusions CoB induces sustained immunological tolerance towards allografted cerebral GRPs which is not disrupted following TBI, and unexpectedly TBI may enhance GRPs engraftment and contribute to post-injury brain tissue repair.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-021-02152-9Glial-restricted progenitorsCo-stimulation blockadeImmunological toleranceTraumatic brain injuryNeuroinflammation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rui Wang
Chengyan Chu
Zhiliang Wei
Lin Chen
Jiadi Xu
Yajie Liang
Miroslaw Janowski
Robert D. Stevens
Piotr Walczak
spellingShingle Rui Wang
Chengyan Chu
Zhiliang Wei
Lin Chen
Jiadi Xu
Yajie Liang
Miroslaw Janowski
Robert D. Stevens
Piotr Walczak
Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts
Journal of Neuroinflammation
Glial-restricted progenitors
Co-stimulation blockade
Immunological tolerance
Traumatic brain injury
Neuroinflammation
author_facet Rui Wang
Chengyan Chu
Zhiliang Wei
Lin Chen
Jiadi Xu
Yajie Liang
Miroslaw Janowski
Robert D. Stevens
Piotr Walczak
author_sort Rui Wang
title Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts
title_short Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts
title_full Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts
title_fullStr Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts
title_full_unstemmed Traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts
title_sort traumatic brain injury does not disrupt costimulatory blockade-induced immunological tolerance to glial-restricted progenitor allografts
publisher BMC
series Journal of Neuroinflammation
issn 1742-2094
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background Cell transplantation-based treatments for neurological disease are promising, yet graft rejection remains a major barrier to successful regenerative therapies. Our group and others have shown that long-lasting tolerance of transplanted stem cells can be achieved in the brain with systemic application of monoclonal antibodies blocking co-stimulation signaling. However, it is unknown if subsequent injury and the blood-brain barrier breach could expose the transplanted cells to systemic immune system spurring fulminant rejection and fatal encephalitis. Therefore, we investigated whether delayed traumatic brain injury (TBI) could trigger graft rejection. Methods Glial-restricted precursor cells (GRPs) were intracerebroventricularly transplanted in immunocompetent neonatal mice and co-stimulation blockade (CoB) was applied 0, 2, 4, and 6 days post-grafting. Bioluminescence imaging (BLI) was performed to monitor the grafted cell survival. Mice were subjected to TBI 12 weeks post-transplantation. MRI and open-field test were performed to assess the brain damage and behavioral change, respectively. The animals were decapitated at week 16 post-transplantation, and the brains were harvested. The survival and distribution of grafted cells were verified from brain sections. Hematoxylin and eosin staining (HE) was performed to observe TBI-induced brain legion, and neuroinflammation was evaluated immunohistochemically. Results BLI showed that grafted GRPs were rejected within 4 weeks after transplantation without CoB, while CoB administration resulted in long-term survival of allografts. BLI signal had a steep rise following TBI and subsequently declined but remained higher than the preinjury level. Open-field test showed TBI-induced anxiety for all animals but neither CoB nor GRP transplantation intensified the symptom. HE and MRI demonstrated a reduction in TBI-induced lesion volume in GRP-transplanted mice compared with non-transplanted mice. Brain sections further validated the survival of grafted GRPs and showed more GRPs surrounding the injured tissue. Furthermore, the brains of post-TBI shiverer mice had increased activation of microglia and astrocytes compared to post-TBI wildtype mice, but infiltration of CD45+ leukocytes remained low. Conclusions CoB induces sustained immunological tolerance towards allografted cerebral GRPs which is not disrupted following TBI, and unexpectedly TBI may enhance GRPs engraftment and contribute to post-injury brain tissue repair.
topic Glial-restricted progenitors
Co-stimulation blockade
Immunological tolerance
Traumatic brain injury
Neuroinflammation
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12974-021-02152-9
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