 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, February 1, 2003, 23(3):727
BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Transplantation of Olfactory Ensheathing Cells into Spinal Cord
Lesions Restores Breathing and Climbing
Ying
Li1,
Patrick
Decherchi2, and
Geoffrey
Raisman1
1 Norman and Sadie Lee Research Centre, Division of
Neurobiology, National Institute for Medical Research, Medical Research
Council, London NW7 1AA, United Kingdom, and
2 Faculté des Sciences du Sport de Marseille-Luminy,
Unité Propre de Recherche de l'Enseignement Supérieur EA3285
Déterminants Physiologiques de l'Activité
Physique-Institut Federatif de Recherche E. J. Marey,
Université de la Méditerranée (Aix-Marseille II),
13288 Marseille cedex 09, France
 |
ABSTRACT |
One of the most devastating effects of damage to the upper spinal
cord is the loss of the ability to breathe; patients suffering these
injuries can be kept alive only with assisted ventilation. No known
method for repairing these injuries exists. We report here the return
of supraspinal control of breathing and major improvements in climbing
after the application of a novel endogenous matrix transfer method.
This method permits efficient transfer and retention of cultured adult
rat olfactory ensheathing cells when transplanted into large lesions
that destroy all tracts on one side at the upper cervical level of the
adult rat spinal cord. This demonstrates that transplantation can
produce simultaneous repair of two independent spinal functions.
Key words:
spinal cord; breathing; olfactory ensheathing
cells; repair; adult; transplantation
 |
Introduction |
Spinal cord lesions above the level
of the third cervical segment sever the continuity of the bulbospinal
respiratory pathways, which carry the descending rhythmic impulses
needed to activate the phrenic motoneuron pool lying in the ventral
gray matter between the third and fifth cervical segments. Clinically,
such patients become dependent on continuously assisted ventilation. A
number of recent studies (Li et al., 1997 , 1998 ; Ramón-Cueto et
al., 2000 ; Lu et al., 2002 ) have put forward evidence that structural and functional repair of the adult rat spinal cord can be achieved by
transplantation of glial cells obtained from the primary olfactory pathways, and this has been proposed as a model for clinical
application (Raisman, 2001 ). From a practical point of view, it would
be difficult to study the repair of the supraspinal respiratory
pathways in animals that need to be maintained on chronic artificial
ventilation as a result of complete loss of function. We therefore
sought partial lesions that would consistently remove a part of the
respiratory pathway while sparing a sufficient supraspinal control
mechanism to maintain respiratory function in normal cage behavior. For this purpose we took advantage of bulbospinal respiratory pathways that
are bilaterally symmetrical. High spinal hemisection abolishes phrenic
nerve and diaphragm function on the side of the lesion but leaves the
opposite side functionally intact.
Endogenous matrix transfer
Our previous results were obtained with injections of cell
suspensions into lesions of the corticospinal tract, where the functional deficits were assessed in a directed forepaw reaching task
(Li et al., 1997 ). In the present study we used knife cuts to sever the
entire spinal gray and white matter on one side at the level of the
second cervical segment in adult rats. The larger amounts of tissue
destruction are more comparable with those encountered in clinical
practice. In addition to respiration, the larger lesions enable us to
study a wider range of functions, such as the coordinated movements
used in climbing. From a practical point of view, however, the
injection of cell suspensions, which was adequate to repair small,
circumscribed electrolytic lesions of the corticospinal tract, would be
highly inefficient for the large hemisections, which are, in effect,
semicircular cuts, and open along their entire periphery. To permit
retention of the transplanted cells in these larger lesions, we have
developed a method of transplantation of the primary cultured cells by
scraping off the matrix that cells produce in culture, and in which
they are embedded. Using the matrix of the cell (i.e., endogenous
matrix) for transfer has several advantages. It preserves the two cell
types (see below) in the proportions they develop in culture, it avoids
the requirement for adding extraneous material, and additionally, from
a practical point of view, it not only avoids loss of cells during
transplantation but also prevents diffusion of the cells away from the
transplant site after operation.
Note on terminology
The present consensus of terminology refers to the p75-positive,
spindle-shaped ("Schwann-like") cells of the olfactory nerves as
olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs). A quite distinct cell type that is
fibronectin-positive, and with all of the characteristics of a
fibroblast, is present (1) in intimate relationship with the OECs in
the olfactory nerves in situ, (2) in the cell cultures derived from them, and (3) in our ultrastructural analysis of transplants in the corticospinal tract (Li et al., 1998 ). We believe that the presence of both cell types is necessary for the transplants to express their reparative properties. In our previous publication we
called these two cell types S cells and A cells, respectively. We
propose that a more explicit identification is to refer to the second
cell type as olfactory nerve fibroblasts (ONFs).
 |
Materials and Methods |
Operation. Eighty-two adult female, inbred AS strain
rats were used. The supraspinal muscles were parted in the midline, the atlanto-occipital membrane was incised, and one-half of the upper cervical spinal cord was transected with the use of an operating microscope and a small knife (model 10072-12; Fine Science Tools GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany), taking care to avoid damage
to the dorsal median blood vessel. This operation has the advantage
that there is virtually no bleeding and no damage to bone or ligament. It can be repaired by skin suture and causes minimal if any local operative discomfort.
Protocol for cell transfer. In 40 animals the lesions were
filled at the time of operation with a mixture of ~500,000 OECs and
ONFs in equal number that were derived from tissue dissected from the
outer nerve and glomerular layers of the rat olfactory bulb. The cells
were trypsinized (1% trypsin for 30 min at 37°C), plated onto 35 mm
dishes coated with poly-L-lysine, and cultured for 14-17 d as described by Li et al. (1998) . The initial plating density is critical for the cells to produce a sufficiently firm matrix
to allow transfer into the lesion site. The pooled tissue from six
bulbs yields approximately four dishes. The optimal cell mixture is
obtained between 14 and 17 d culture in DMEM-F12 medium with 10%
fetal calf serum (3133-028; Invitrogen, San Diego, CA). At
that time, each dish yields ~1.5 million cells, of which ~50% are
p75-positive OECs and 50% are fibronectin-positive ONFs (Li et al.,
1998 ). They were embedded in a matrix of their own production and
covered the dish to a thickness of ~20 µm. This cell-containing matrix is scraped off the dish with a polythene scraper (3010; Costar, Corning, NY), gathered into a mass of ~5
mm, and cut into four to five pieces. Using watchmaker's forceps, the
pieces are lifted out of the dish and transferred directly into the
lesion area. Each piece is able to fill a hemisection lesion of ~4
mm2, with an edge separation of ~2 mm.
Compared with our previous experiments with injection of a suspension
of cells into corticospinal tract lesions (Li et al., 1997 ), the
present matrix transfer protocol minimizes loss of cells remaining in
the container and the micropipette during transfer. In the previous
experiments in which a cell suspension was injected into corticospinal
tract lesions with a volume of ~1 mm3,
one dish of cells was needed for each transplant. In the present hemisections, with a lesion volume of ~8
mm3, one dish of cells was sufficient for
up to five transplants (a 40-fold increase in efficiency). However, the
overall advantage over using a cell suspension is effectively much
greater, because the matrix retains the cells in the lesion site,
thereby preventing postoperative loss by diffusion and obviating the
need for introducing any exogenous matrix materials. One day before
transplantation, the cells were transfected with adenovirus harboring
enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) (available from
Clontech, Palo Alto, CA). This labels ~50% of the cells
and provides a strong fluorescent label for up to 12-14 d after
transplantation (Ruitenberg et al., 2002 ).
Electrophysiological recording of respiratory rhythm in the
phrenic nerve. After 2 months of survival, the rats were deeply anesthetized, blood pressure was monitored continuously, the rats were
endotracheally intubated, and the phrenic nerve on the operated side
was exposed, immersed in a pool of warm paraffin oil, cut distally, and
placed on bipolar tungsten electrodes (Decherchi et al., 1996 ).
The compound action potential of ~200 µV was amplified (0.5-2 × 103), filtered (50-3000 Hz), and summed using an
integrator (Neurolog; Digitimer Ltd., Welwyn Garden City,
UK) with a time constant of 50 msec to display the burst analysis.
After recording the activity during spontaneous breathing, the animals
were paralyzed with a neuromuscular blocking agent (Flaxedil; AAH
Pharmaceuticals Ltd, Coventry, UK; 10 mg/kg gallamine triethiodide,
i.v.) and artificially ventilated with a mixture of room air (50%) and
oxygen (50%) at a rate of 40-60 per minute (tidal volume, 2-4 ml).
The purpose of this maneuver is to avoid any possible peripheral input (e.g., from the contralateral diaphragm) and thus ensure that any
recorded phrenic rhythm is of central origin. To provoke the brainstem
respiratory centers to their maximal output, recording was continued
while the ventilator was temporarily stopped (20-50 sec). This was to
ensure that the conditions of our experiment did not elicit rhythmic
supraspinal respiratory activity in latent crossed pathways in the
lesion-alone animals, and therefore, that any activity observed in the
phrenic nerve ipsilateral to the lesion was dependent on the presence
of transplanted OECs.
Climbing. Two weeks after the operation, rats were tested by
allowing them to climb twice up an inclined, 1-m-long grid at an angle
of 15° to the vertical. Climbing the grid is a spontaneous response
acquired easily, and requiring neither compulsion nor reward. The
climbing test was repeated three times a week for 7 successive weeks.
Unoperated animals climb readily, with all four paws locating and
grasping the bars without fault. In all operated animals, the forepaws
and the hindpaws on the operated side showed varying degrees of
difficulty in locating the grid bars. As a result, the forepaws
overshot the bars to a depth varying from the wrist to the axilla. The
rat sensed the overshoot, the paw was withdrawn, and the rat explored
until it made contact with the bar, which was then grasped as normal
and used as an anchor for the propulsive phase of the climb. In the
disadvantaged paws, the propulsive force needed for climbing appeared
normal, and the strength of the grasp (assessed by pulling the rats off the grid) was equal on the two sides. To distinguish between
lesion-alone and the lesion plus transplant groups of animals, the last
of the three weekly tests was video-recorded for each of the 6 successive weeks from the third to the eighth week postoperatively. The
faults in the forepaw on the operated side were scored by a 1/25th
split-frame video analysis of all records, with a score of 1 for
overshooting through the grid to the level of the wrist, 2 to the
elbow, and 3 to the axilla. This method of scoring is objective, based
on permanent records, and gives consistent values for different observers.
Histology. After the 6 weeks of serial functional testing
for climbing, for terminal electrophysiology of the phrenic nerves, or
both, the rats were perfused with 0.1 M PBS, and
the extent of the lesion in each animal was assessed by reconstruction
from 20-µm-thick serial longitudinal cryostat sections taken through the entire width of the spinal cord at the level of the
lesions/transplants and fixed on slides with acid-alcohol; alternate
sections were stained with aqueous thionin or immunostained for
neurofilament (Anti-Pan, 1:1000; Sternberger, Lutherville, MD) and
counterstained with propidium iodide (Li et al., 1998 ).
 |
Results |
Hemisection produces consistent lesion with minimal damage to
surrounding intact tissue, and the extent of the lesion in each individual was assessed by reconstruction from serial section histology. The hemisections, even those transecting the central canal
and reaching beyond the midline, healed with minimal scarring, and no
cyst formation or persistent macrophage invasion (Fig. 1A,B). The matrix
transplant method resulted in highly effective retention of the
transplanted cells in the lesion site (Fig.
2). Comparison of Figure
2A and B shows no diminution or diffusion of the transplanted cell mass from 3 to 10 d, by which time the cells show clear rostrocaudal alignment and migration into the host
fiber tracts.

View larger version (124K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Horizontal sections through the mid-dorsoventral
level of the spinal cord (top is rostral, left
edge is the lateral edge of the spinal cord). A,
Thionin; arrows indicate midline. B,
Confocal image of the boxed area in A
from an adjacent section stained with neurofilament
immunohistochemistry (green) and counterstained
with propidium iodide (red). Section thickness is 20 µm; survival time, 2 months. Scale bars: A, 250 µm;
B, 100 µm.
|
|

View larger version (100K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Transplanted OECs labeled with an adenoviral GFP
construct form a large and dense meshwork in the lesioned area at
3 d (A) and 10 d
(B) after operation, by which time the cells have
adopted an elongated shape, aligned rostrocaudally. This shows that the
cells are efficiently retained and remain clustered in the transplant
site. Confocal image, green fluorescence, OECs;
counterstain propidium iodide, red. Section thickness,
100 µm. Scale bar, 100 µm.
|
|
Immediately after the operation, all animals showed an unsteady gait
and reduced responses to pinch of the contralateral hindpaw. In both
lesion-alone and lesion plus transplant animals, all symptoms improved
over the first week after operation. This improvement was markedly more
rapid in the transplanted animals, but by 2 weeks, both groups had
reached a level of cage behavior that was indistinguishable from each
other and from that of unoperated rats.
Breathing
A series of 23 hemisected animals was used to investigate the
effects of lesions (Fig. 3) on the
supraspinal control of the respiratory rhythm in the phrenic nerve
after 2 months of survival. Serial section thionin and neurofilament
histology showed that 14 of these animals had complete hemisections
that destroyed the entire half of the spinal cord, reaching at least as
far as the midline (Fig. 3B). In a terminal procedure under
anesthesia, the electrical activity of the phrenic nerves was recorded
(Fig. 3D). All 14 animals with complete hemisection had
total unilateral loss of the supraspinal respiratory rhythm in the
phrenic nerve on the operated side both during spontaneous breathing
and also on a ventilator after curarization (to block any peripheral
input) and brief asphyxial stress (to maximize the discharges in the descending supraspinal pathways). In nine animals in which the histological analysis showed that the hemisections were incomplete, the
lesions had severed the lateral and dorsal parts of the cord but had
spared the ventral funiculus (Fig. 3A). In all of these cases, the respiratory rhythm was present in the phrenic nerve of the
operated side. This is in agreement with published evidence for a
ventrolateral location of the descending bulbospinal respiratory pathways (Feldman et al., 1985 ; Ellenberger and Feldman, 1988 ; Castro-Moure and Goshgarian, 1996 ).

View larger version (57K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
The extent of the hemisections is plotted in
gray on the left, with the medial
boundary of the lesions marked. Each line represents a different
animal. A, Lesions that spare the ventral white columns
(**) also spare respiratory rhythm in the ipsilateral phrenic nerve.
B, Lesions that abolish the rhythm. C,
Transplanted lesioned rats in which the hemisections are equal to or
larger than those in B, but the rhythm is present
because of the presence of the transplants. Scale bar, 1 mm.
D, Electrophysiological recording of the rhythmic
compound action potential from the phrenic nerve in unoperated animals
("intact controls" shows two representative cases). The rhythm is
abolished in animals with complete hemisections that include the
ipsilateral ventral funiculus (B); "lesions
alone" shows a representative 5 of this group of 14. The rhythm is
present in 19 animals (C shows 5 representative cases)
that have equally complete or even larger lesions but that also
received transplanted OECs ("lesions with transplants").
Left column shows recordings made during spontaneous
breathing. Right column shows recordings after
curarization and 20-50 sec of asphyxia.
|
|
In 24 animals, cells were transplanted into the hemisections.
Subsequent histology confirmed that all of these hemisections completely destroyed the ventral funiculus. [The absence of incomplete lesions in the group of lesion plus transplant animals is the result of
the additional damage caused by inserting the transplants (Fig.
3C, also see Fig.
4C for the same effect).] On
terminal examination after 2 months of survival, 19 of these lesion
plus transplant animals showed a clear respiratory rhythm in the
phrenic nerve during spontaneous breathing, and in 17 of these, the
rhythm was maintained during curarization and asphyxia (Fig.
3D).

View larger version (30K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
The extent of the hemisections, represented as in
Figure 3. A, Lesions that give a lower climbing fault
score (79 ± 15) and spare the region (***) of the dorsal columns
and corticospinal tract. B, Lesions that are complete
hemisections and give the highest fault scores (226 ± 18).
C, Transplanted lesions with complete hemisections in
which the fault score (55 ± 7) is reduced by the presence of the
transplants. Scale bar, 1 mm. D, E, Faults in the use of
the ipsilateral forepaw for climbing. The total fault score for two
measured test climbs (average of 6 weekly tests) for the 14 individual
animals in the lesion-alone group (D, gray
bars) and the 23 individual animals in the lesion plus
transplant group (E, black bars) is
shown; inset compares group means ± SEM for
lesion-alone (LES, gray), lesion plus
transplant (TRA, black), and normal,
unoperated (N).
|
|
Climbing
During the period from 10 to 20 d after surgery, an
improvement in climbing skill was observed, with the animals in the
transplanted group clearly recovering more rapidly than those with
lesions alone. From 3 weeks onward, individual scores for each animal in both groups showed a stable weekly fault score with neither improvement nor deterioration over the 6 weeks of the tested period. For 14 lesion-alone rats in which the subsequent histology indicated that the lesion had completely destroyed the dorsal columns (Fig. 4B,D), the average fault score for the six weekly
totals was 226 ± 18. In five lesion-alone animals in which the
subsequent histology showed that lesion had spared a major part of the
dorsal columns (Fig. 3A), the climbing deficit was less
severe (group mean, 79 ± 15; Student's t test = 6.3; p < 0.0001).
The group of 23 lesion plus transplant animals all had lesions that
completely destroyed the dorsal columns. In the climbing test, the 23 lesion plus transplant group animals had a mean score of 55 ± 7 (Fig. 4C,E; Student's t test for comparison with
lesion-alone including dorsal columns = 8.89; p < 0.0001). Of these, apart from one exception, the remaining 22 rats all
had considerably lower fault scores than the lesion-alone group. None
of the transplanted animals reached the performance level of unoperated
animals (2 ± 0.2; n = 6).
 |
Discussion |
General condition
In evaluating functional outcomes in general, it is important to
realize that rat spinal injuries do not produce the same degree of
incapacity as human injuries, and also that in both rats and humans,
major functional improvements occur spontaneously, and can be greatly
enhanced by rehabilitative measures, without any reparative
interventions in the spinal cord. The transplantation of cells is by no
means the only cause of recovery in lesioned animals. In their general
cage mobility, all lesioned animals with or without transplants
improved greatly during the first 10 d after operation. Possible
factors contributing to this improvement include reduction of edema,
clearing of debris, vascularization, sprouting of new connections in
denervated areas, and reprogramming of existing connections. Our
observations show that after the initial period, however, the lesioned
animals have persistent deficits in important complex functions, such
as breathing and climbing.
Breathing
Nantwi and Goshgarian (2001) have extensively studied the
"crossed phrenic phenomenon" in which activation of a latent,
crossed-descending supraspinal respiratory pathway by section of the
contralateral phrenic nerve, or by administration of alkylxanthines,
restores function in the phrenic nerve and hemidiaphragm ipsilateral to a high cervical hemisection. Under the curarization and brief asphyxial
conditions of our experiment, no activity appeared in the ipsilateral
phrenic nerve in any of the 14 rats with complete hemisections
involving the ventral funiculus. The return of supraspinal respiratory
rhythm in our 19 transplanted animals with complete hemisections is
therefore absolutely dependent on the presence of the transplanted
OECs. Whether this recovery is caused by regeneration of severed
ipsilateral supraspinal connections across the C2 lesion or by
activation or sprouting of crossed pathways (Goshgarian et al., 1991 )
remains for further study. But whichever the mechanism may be, a
significant difference is that whereas the crossed phrenic phenomenon
is elicited only under conditions of respiratory stress, the
transplants restore the ipsilateral rhythm (O'Hara and Goshgarian, 1991 ) during spontaneous breathing under unstressed conditions, requiring no drug administration, and the repair is presumably maintained and permanent.
Climbing
An overall improvement in hindlimb function during climbing has
been reported in animals with OECs transplanted into complete midthoracic spinal cord transections (Ramón-Cueto et al., 2000 ). These animals, however, are severely disabled, and require intensive postoperative maintenance. The present study indicates that more precisely quantifiable climbing deficits can be consistently produced and studied in the ipsilateral forepaw after upper cervical
hemisections, which leave the animals in overall much better condition,
and demonstrate reliable and robust improvement after transplantation. This provides a simpler experimental model for studying the effects of
different candidate reparative cell types and molecular interventions (Thallmair et al., 1998 ; Tang et al., 2001 ; Bradbury et al., 2002 ).
The histological analysis of the incomplete lesions indicates that the
return of breathing reflects repair of damage to ventrally located
tracts, and the return of climbing reflects repair of damage to
dorsally located fiber tracts. These beneficial effects of the
transplanted OECs could be attributable either to regeneration of cut
fibers (as reported in other studies (Li et al., 1997 , 1998 ) or to
sprouting of uncut fibers (Thallmair et al., 1998 ), in either case
restoring access to neural information otherwise made unavailable by
the lesion. The demonstration that transplantation can simultaneously
repair two quite independent spinal functions is encouraging for the
future use of autografts in human spinal cord injuries.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 13, 2002; revised Nov. 4, 2002; accepted Nov. 13, 2002.
This work was supported by the British Neurological Research Trust, the
Institut pour la Recherche sur la Moelle Epinière, and the
International Spinal Research Trust. We thank Grant Roalfe for cell
culture, John Atkinson for the vector, Laiwen Fu for histology work,
and Dr. Daqing Li for collaboration.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Geoffrey Raisman, Division of
Neurobiology, National Institute for Medical Research, The Ridgeway,
Mill Hill, London NW7 1AA, UK. E-mail: graisma{at}nimr.mrc.ac.uk.
 |
References |
-
Bradbury EJ,
Moon LDF,
Popat RJ,
King VR,
Bennett GS,
Patel PN,
Fawcett JW,
McMahon SB
(2002)
Chondroitinase ABC promotes functional recovery after spinal cord injury.
Nature
416:636-640[Medline].
-
Castro-Moure F,
Goshgarian HG
(1996)
Reversible cervical hemispinalization of the rat spinal cord by a cooling device.
Exp Neurol
141:102-112[ISI][Medline].
-
Decherchi P,
Lammari-Barreault N,
Gauthier P
(1996)
Regeneration of respiratory pathways within spinal peripheral nerve grafts.
Exp Neurol
137:1-14[Medline].
-
Ellenberger HH,
Feldman JL
(1988)
Monosynaptic transmission of respiratory drive to phrenic motoneurons from brainstem bulbospinal neurons in rats.
J Comp Neurol
269:47-57[ISI][Medline].
-
Feldman JL,
Loewy AD,
Speck DF
(1985)
Projections from the ventral respiratory group to phrenic and intercostal motoneurons in cat: an autoradiographic study.
J Neurosci
5:1993-2000[Abstract].
-
Goshgarian HG,
Ellenberger HH,
Feldman JL
(1991)
Decussation of bulbospinal respiratory axons at the level of the phrenic nuclei in adult rats: a possible substrate for the crossed phrenic phenomenon.
Exp Neurol
111:135-139[ISI][Medline].
-
Li Y,
Field PM,
Raisman G
(1997)
Repair of adult rat corticospinal tract by transplants of olfactory ensheathing cells.
Science
277:2000-2002[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Li Y,
Field PM,
Raisman G
(1998)
Regeneration of adult rat corticospinal axons induced by transplanted olfactory ensheathing cells.
J Neurosci
18:10514-10524[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Lu J,
Féron F,
Mackay-Sim A,
Waite PME
(2002)
Olfactory ensheathing cells promote locomotor recovery after delayed transplantation into transected spinal cord.
Brain
125:14-21[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Nantwi KD,
Goshgarian HG
(2001)
Alkylxanthine-induced recovery of respiratory function following cervical spinal cord injury in adult rats.
Exp Neurol
168:123-134[ISI][Medline].
-
O'Hara TEJ,
Goshgarian HG
(1991)
Quantitative assessment of phrenic nerve functional recovery mediated by the crossed phrenic reflex at various time intervals after spinal cord injury.
Exp Neurol
111:244-250[ISI][Medline].
-
Raisman G
(2001)
Olfactory ensheathing cells
another miracle cure for spinal cord injury?
Nat Rev Neurosci
2:369-375[ISI][Medline]. -
Ramón-Cueto A,
Cordero MI,
Santos-Benito FF,
Avila J
(2000)
Functional recovery of paraplegic rats and motor axon regeneration in their spinal cords by olfactory ensheathing glia.
Neuron
25:425-435[ISI][Medline].
-
Ruitenberg MJ,
Plant GW,
Christensen CL,
Blits B,
Niclou SP,
Harvey AR,
Boer GJ,
Verhaagen J
(2002)
Viral vector-mediated gene expression in olfactory ensheathing glia implants in the lesioned rat spinal cord.
Gene Ther
9:135-146[ISI][Medline].
-
Tang S,
Qiu J,
Nikulina E,
Filbin MT
(2001)
Soluble myelin-associated glycoprotein released from damaged white matter inhibits axonal regeneration.
Mol Cell Neurosci
18:259-269[ISI][Medline].
-
Thallmair M,
Metz GA,
Z'Graggen WJ,
Raineteau O,
Kartje GL,
Schwab ME
(1998)
Neurite growth inhibitors restrict plasticity and functional recovery following corticospinal tract lesions.
Nat Neurosci
1:124-131[ISI][Medline].
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/03/233727-05$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. D. Kubasak, D. L. Jindrich, H. Zhong, A. Takeoka, K. C. McFarland, C. Munoz-Quiles, R. R. Roy, V. R. Edgerton, A. Ramon-Cueto, and P. E. Phelps
OEG implantation and step training enhance hindlimb-stepping ability in adult spinal transected rats
Brain,
January 1, 2008;
131(1):
264 - 276.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. FitzGerald and J. Fawcett
Repair in the central nervous system
J Bone Joint Surg Br,
November 1, 2007;
89-B(11):
1413 - 1420.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
E. Au, M. W. Richter, A. J. Vincent, W. Tetzlaff, R. Aebersold, E. H. Sage, and A. J. Roskams
SPARC from Olfactory Ensheathing Cells Stimulates Schwann Cells to Promote Neurite Outgrowth and Enhances Spinal Cord Repair
J. Neurosci.,
July 4, 2007;
27(27):
7208 - 7221.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
A. Toft, D. T. Scott, S. C. Barnett, and J. S. Riddell
Electrophysiological evidence that olfactory cell transplants improve function after spinal cord injury
Brain,
April 1, 2007;
130(4):
970 - 984.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
B. H. Dobkin, A. Curt, and J. Guest
Cellular Transplants in China: Observational Study from the Largest Human Experiment in Chronic Spinal Cord Injury
Neurorehabil Neural Repair,
March 1, 2006;
20(1):
5 - 13.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
F. Feron, C. Perry, J. Cochrane, P. Licina, A. Nowitzke, S. Urquhart, T. Geraghty, and A. Mackay-Sim
Autologous olfactory ensheathing cell transplantation in human spinal cord injury
Brain,
December 1, 2005;
128(12):
2951 - 2960.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. J. Ruitenberg, D. B. Levison, S. V. Lee, J. Verhaagen, A. R. Harvey, and G. W. Plant
NT-3 expression from engineered olfactory ensheathing glia promotes spinal sparing and regeneration
Brain,
April 1, 2005;
128(4):
839 - 853.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. G. Boyd, J. Lee, V. Skihar, R. Doucette, and M. D. Kawaja
LacZ-expressing olfactory ensheathing cells do not associate with myelinated axons after implantation into the compressed spinal cord
PNAS,
February 17, 2004;
101(7):
2162 - 2166.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|