4.8 Article

NT3-chitosan elicits robust endogenous neurogenesis to enable functional recovery after spinal cord injury

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1510194112

Keywords

spinal cord injury; NT3; chitosan; functional recovery; endogenous neurogenesis

Funding

  1. State Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China [31130022, 313101021, 31320103903, 31271037, 81330030, 91319309, 31271371]
  2. National Science and Technology Pillar Program of China [2012BAI17B04]
  3. International Cooperation in Science and Technology Projects of the Ministry of Science Technology of China [2014DFA30640]
  4. National 863 Project [2012AA020506]
  5. National Ministry of Education Special Fund for Excellent Doctoral Dissertation [201356]
  6. Special Funds for Excellent Doctoral Dissertation of Beijing, China [20111000601]
  7. Key Project of the Department of Science and Technology of Beijing [D090800046609004]
  8. 973 Project [2012CB966303]

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Neural stem cells (NSCs) in the adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS) hold the key to neural regeneration through proper activation, differentiation, and maturation, to establish nascent neural networks, which can be integrated into damaged neural circuits to repair function. However, the CNS injury microenvironment is often inhibitory and inflammatory, limiting the ability of activated NSCs to differentiate into neurons and form nascent circuits. Here we report that neurotrophin-3 (NT3)-coupled chitosan biomaterial, when inserted into a 5-mm gap of completely transected and excised rat thoracic spinal cord, elicited robust activation of endogenous NSCs in the injured spinal cord. Through slow release of NT3, the biomaterial attracted NSCs to migrate into the lesion area, differentiate into neurons, and form functional neural networks, which interconnected severed ascending and descending axons, resulting in sensory and motor behavioral recovery. Our study suggests that enhancing endogenous neurogenesis could be a novel strategy for treatment of spinal cord injury.

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