4.6 Article

Neuroprotective effect of hypoxic preconditioning and neuronal activation in a in vitro human model of the ischemic penumbra

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 18, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/abe68a

Keywords

human induced pluripotent stem cells; ischemic penumbra; neuronal networks; optogenetic stimulation

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The study established a human neuronal model of the ischemic penumbra and found that human neuronal networks are vulnerable to hypoxia, which may lead to irreversible impairments if a critical time threshold is crossed. Hypoxic preconditioning can improve resistance to a second hypoxic insult. Additionally, stimulatory treatments targeting neuronal silencing during hypoxia, such as optogenetic stimulation, were found to be neuroprotective in contrast to previously ineffective treatments.
Objective. In ischemic stroke, treatments to protect neurons from irreversible damage are urgently needed. Studies in animal models have shown that neuroprotective treatments targeting neuronal silencing improve brain recovery, but in clinical trials none of these were effective in patients. This failure of translation poses doubts on the real efficacy of treatments tested and on the validity of animal models for human stroke. Here, we established a human neuronal model of the ischemic penumbra by using human induced pluripotent stem cells and we provided an in-depth characterization of neuronal responses to hypoxia and treatment strategies at the network level. Approach. We generated neurons from induced pluripotent stem cells derived from healthy donor and we cultured them on micro-electrode arrays. We measured the electrophysiological activity of human neuronal networks under controlled hypoxic conditions. We tested the effect of different treatment strategies on neuronal network functionality. Main results. Human neuronal networks are vulnerable to hypoxia reflected by a decrease in activity and synchronicity under low oxygen conditions. We observe that full, partial or absent recovery depend on the timing of re-oxygenation and we provide a critical time threshold that, if crossed, is associated with irreversible impairments. We found that hypoxic preconditioning improves resistance to a second hypoxic insult. Finally, in contrast to previously tested, ineffective treatments, we show that stimulatory treatments counteracting neuronal silencing during hypoxia, such as optogenetic stimulation, are neuroprotective. Significance. We presented a human neuronal model of the ischemic penumbra and we provided insights that may offer the basis for novel therapeutic approaches for patients after stroke. The use of human neurons might improve drug discovery and translation of findings to patients and might open new perspectives for personalized investigations.

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