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Venous Graft-Derived Cells Participate in Peripheral Nerve Regeneration
Authors
B Battiston
B Zheng
+41 more
Bruno Péault
Burhan Gharaibeh
DG Sotereanos
DG Vardakas
DT Chiu
DT Chiu
E Oberlin
ED Werts
ET Zambidis
GE Amiel
H Koch
J Xu
J Xu
JK Terzis
Johnny Huard
JS Gould
JT Campbell
Katherine A. Clark
KH Chou
LC Schon
M Crisan
M Fornaro
ME Easley
MH Levine
Mitra Lavasani
PJ Schaner
Q Shen
R Kakinoki
RL DeGowin
Robert A. Kaufmann
Robert J. Goitz
S Geuna
SE Varitimidis
Sebastian Gehrmann
T Mosmann
TD Palmer
VR Masear
VR Masear
W Tang
Wei-Chun Chin
ZT Kokkalis
Publication date
1 January 2011
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Background: Based on growing evidence that some adult multipotent cells necessary for tissue regeneration reside in the walls of blood vessels and the clinical success of vein wrapping for functional repair of nerve damage, we hypothesized that the repair of nerves via vein wrapping is mediated by cells migrating from the implanted venous grafts into the nerve bundle. Methodology/Principal Findings: To test the hypothesis, severed femoral nerves of rats were grafted with venous grafts from animals of the opposite sex. Nerve regeneration was impaired when decellularized or irradiated venous grafts were used in comparison to untreated grafts, supporting the involvement of venous graft-derived cells in peripheral nerve repair. Donor cells bearing Y chromosomes integrated into the area of the host injured nerve and participated in remyelination and nerve regeneration. The regenerated nerve exhibited proper axonal myelination, and expressed neuronal and glial cell markers. Conclusions/Significance: These novel findings identify the mechanism by which vein wrapping promotes nerve regeneration. © 2011 Lavasani et al
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