Introduction: The incidence rate of senile dementia is rising, and there is no definite cure for it yet. Cell therapy, as a new investigational approach, has shown promising results. Hair bulges with abundant easily accessible neural stem cells permit autologous implantation in irreversible neurodegenerative disorders.
Methods: Fifty rats were randomly divided into 5 groups of control, sham-operation, two-common carotid vessel-occlusion rats that received vehicle (2VO + V), 2VO rats that received 1 × 106 epidermal stem cells (2VO + ESC1), and 2VO rats that received 2.5 × 106 epidermal stem cells (2VO + ESC2) in 300 µl PBS intravenously on days 4, 9, and 14 after surgery. The epidermal neural crest stem cells (EPI-NCSCs) were isolated from hair follicles of rat whiskers. The open-field, passive avoidance, and Morris water maze were used as behavioral tests. The basal-synaptic transmission, long-term potentiation (LTP), and short-term synaptic plasticity were evaluated by field-potential recording of the CA1 hippocampal area.
Results: 30 days after the first transplantation in the 2VO + ESC1 group, functional recovery was prominent in anxiety and fear memory compared to the 2VO + ESC2 group, while LTP induction was recovered in both groups of grafted animals without improvement in basal synaptic transmission. These positive recoveries may be related to the release of different neurotrophic factors from grafted cells that can stimulate endogenous neurogenesis and synaptic plasticity.
Conclusions: Our results showed that EPI-NCSCs implantation could rescue LTP and cognitive disability in 2VO rats, while transplantation of 1 million cells showed better performance relative to 2.5 million cells.
Keywords: Epidermal neural crest stem cells; LTP; Memory; Vascular dementia.
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