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The influence of immunosuppressive drugs on neural stem/progenitor cell fate in vitro
Authors:Marco Skardelly  Anja Glien  Claudia Groba  Nadine Schlichting  Manja Kamprad  Juergen Meixensberger  Javorina Milosevic
Institution:1. Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital, Leipzig, Germany;2. Translational Centre for Regenerative Medicine, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany;3. Institute of Clinical Immunology, Medical Faculty, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:In allogenic and xenogenic transplantation, adequate immunosuppression plays a major role in graft survival, especially over the long term. The effect of immunosuppressive drugs on neural stem/progenitor cell fate has not been sufficiently explored. The focus of this study is to systematically investigate the effects of the following four different immunotherapeutic strategies on human neural progenitor cell survival/death, proliferation, metabolic activity, differentiation and migration in vitro: (1) cyclosporine A (CsA), a calcineurin inhibitor; (2) everolimus (RAD001), an mTOR-inhibitor; (3) mycophenolic acid (MPA, mycophenolate), an inhibitor of inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase and (4) prednisolone, a steroid. At the minimum effective concentration (MEC), we found a prominent decrease in hNPCs' proliferative capacity (BrdU incorporation), especially for CsA and MPA, and an alteration of the NAD(P)H-dependent metabolic activity. Cell death rate, neurogenesis, gliogenesis and cell migration remained mostly unaffected under these conditions for all four immunosuppressants, except for apoptotic cell death, which was significantly increased by MPA treatment.
Keywords:Neural progenitor cells  Human  Immunosuppressive drugs  Transplantation  Mycophenolate  Cyclosporine A  Everolimus  Prednisolone
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