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Authors Rizzo, S. A. ; Bartley, O. ; Rosser, A. ; Newland, B.
Title Oxygen-glucose deprivation in neurons: implications for cell transplantation therapies
Date 01.10.2021
Number 59686
Abstract Cell replacement therapies hold the potential to restore neuronal networks compromised by neurodegenerative diseases (such as Parkinson’s disease or Huntington’s disease), or focal tissue damage (via a stroke or spinal cord injury). Despite some promising results achieved to date, transplanted cells typically exhibit poor survival in the central nervous system, thus limiting therapeutic efficacy of the graft. Although cell death post-transplantation is likely to be multifactorial in causality, growing evidence suggests that the lack of vascularisation at the graft site, and the resulting ischemic host environment, may play a fundamental role in the fate of grafted cells. Herein, we summarise data showing how the deprivation of either oxygen, glucose, or both in combination, impacts the survival of neurons and review strategies which may improve graft survival in the central nervous system.
Publisher Progress in Neurobiology
Wikidata Q108866584
Citation Progress in Neurobiology 205 (2021) 102126
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/J.PNEUROBIO.2021.102126
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