1 research outputs found
Effects of Rho Kinase Inhibitors on Grafts of Dopaminergic Cell Precursors in a Rat Model of Parkinson's Disease.
In models of Parkinson’s disease (PD), Rho kinase (ROCK) inhibitors have antiapoptotic and axonstabilizing
effects on damaged neurons, decrease the neuroinflammatory response, and protect
against dopaminergic neuron death and axonal retraction. ROCK inhibitors have also shown protective
effects against apoptosis induced by handling and dissociation of several types of stem cells. However,
the effect of ROCK inhibitors on dopaminergic cell grafts has not been investigated. In the
present study, treatment of dopaminergic cell suspension with ROCK inhibitors yielded significant decreases
in the number of surviving dopaminergic neurons, in the density of graft-derived dopaminergic
fibers, and in graft vascularization. Dopaminergic neuron death also markedly increased in primary
mesencephalic cultures when the cell suspension was treated with ROCK inhibitors before plating,
which suggests that decreased angiogenesis is not the only factor leading to cell death in grafts. Interestingly,
treatment of the host 6-hydroxydopamine-lesioned rats with ROCK inhibitors induced a
slight, nonsignificant increase in the number of surviving neurons, as well as marked increases in the
density of graft-derived dopaminergic fibers and the size of the striatal reinnervated area. The study
findings discourage treatment of cell suspensions before grafting. However, treatment of the host
induces a marked increase in graft-derived striatal reinnervation. Because ROCK inhibitors have also
exerted neuroprotective effects in several models of PD, treatment of the host with ROCK inhibitors,
currently used against vascular diseases in clinical practice, before and after grafting may be a useful
adjuvant to cell therapy in PDMinisterio de Salud PI12/00798; RD12/0019/0020Ministerio de EconomĂa y Competitividad BFU2012-370