Journal article
Cross-talk between neural stem cells and immune cells: the key to better brain repair?
Nature Neuroscience, Vol.15(8), pp.1078-1087
Aug/2012
Abstract
Systemic or intracerebral delivery of neural stem and progenitor cells (NSPCs) and activation of endogenous NSPCs hold much promise as potential treatments for diseases in the human CNS. Recent studies have shed new light on the interaction between the NSPCs and cells belonging to the innate and adaptive arms of the immune system. According to these studies, the immune cells can be both beneficial and detrimental for cell genesis from grafted and endogenous NSPCs in the CNS, and the NSPCs exert their beneficial effects not only by cell replacement but also by immunomodulation and trophic support. The crosstalk between immune cells and NSPCs and their progeny seems to determine both the efficacy of endogenous regenerative responses and the mechanism of action as well as the fate and functional integration of grafted NSPCs. Better understanding of the dialog between NSPCs and innate and adaptive immune cells is crucial for further development of effective strategies for CNS repair.
Details
- Title
- Cross-talk between neural stem cells and immune cells; the key to better brain repair?
- Creators
- Zaal Kokaia (null)Gianvito Martino (null)Michal Schwartz (null) - 972WIS_INST___123Olle Lindvall (null)
- Resource Type
- Journal article; Review
- Publication Details
- Nature Neuroscience, Vol.15(8), pp.1078-1087; Aug/2012
- Number of pages
- 10
- Language
- English
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nn.3163
- Grant note
- European Union [279017]All authors are supported by European Union FP7 collaborative grant TargetBraIn (no. 279017)._ALMAME_DELIMITER_
- Record Identifier
- 993264870603596
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