Blood glutamate EAAT(2)-cell grabbing therapy in cerebral ischemia
Pérez Mato, María; Iglesias Rey, Ramón; Vieites Prado, Alba; Dopico López, Antonio; Argibay González, Bárbara; Fernández Susavila, Héctor; Da Silva Candal, Andrés Alexander; Pérez Díaz, María Amparo; Correa Paz, Clara; Gunther, A.; Ávila Gómez, Paulo; Loza García, María Isabel; Baumann, A.; Castillo Sánchez, José; Sobrino, T.; Campos Pérez, Francisco
Identificadores
Identificadores
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Visualización o descarga de ficheros
Fecha de publicación
2019Título de revista
EBioMedicine
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
animales | trasplante de células madre mesenquimatosas | transfección | transportador 2 de aminoácidos excitadores | isquemia cerebral | proteínas de transporte de glutamato en la membrana plasmática | línea celular | ácido glutámico | humanos | ratas | células HEK293MeSH
Glutamic Acid | Rats | Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation | Glutamate Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins | Cell Line | Humans | Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter 2 | Brain Ischemia | Animals | Transfection | HEK293 CellsResumen
BACKGROUND: Excitatory amino acid transporter 2 (EAAT2) plays a pivotal role in glutamate clearance in the adult brain, thereby preventing excitotoxic effects. Considering the high efficacy of EAAT2 for glutamate uptake, we hypothesized that the expression of this transporter in mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for systemic administration could yield a cell-based glutamate-grabbing therapy, combining the intrinsic properties of these cells with excitotoxic protection. METHODS: To address this hypothesis, EAAT2-encoding cDNA was introduced into MSCs and human embryonic kidney 293 cells (HEK cells) as the control cell line. EAAT2 expression and functionality were evaluated by in vitro assays. Blood glutamate-grabbing activity was tested in healthy and ischemic rat models treated with 3x10(6) and 9x10(6) cells/animal. FINDINGS: The expression of EAAT2 in both cell types conferred the expected glutamate-grabbing activity in in vitro and in vivo studies. The functional improvement observed in ischemic rats treated with EAAT2-HEK at low dose, confirmed that this effect was indeed mediated by the glutamate-grabbing activity associated with EAAT2 functionality. Unexpectedly, both cell doses of non-transfected MSCs induced higher protection than transfected EAAT2-MSCs by another mechanism independent of the glutamate-grabbing capacity. INTERPRETATION: Although the transfection procedure most likely interferes with some of the intrinsic protective mechanisms of mesenchymal cells, the results show that the induced expression of EAAT2 in cells represents a novel alternative to mitigate the excitotoxic effects of glutamate and paves the way to combine this strategy with current cell therapies for cerebral ischemia.