Biomaterial Developed at UCLA Helps
Regrow Brain Tissue after Stroke in Mice
Gel suppresses scarring, creates scaffolding for new neurons and blood vessels
By Leigh Hopper, UCLA
“We tested this in laboratory mice to determine if it would repair the brain and lead to recovery in a model of stroke,” said Dr. S. Thomas Carmichael, professor of neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “The study indicated that new brain tissue can be regenerated in what was previously just an inactive brain scar after stroke.”
Regrow Brain Tissue after Stroke in Mice
Gel suppresses scarring, creates scaffolding for new neurons and blood vessels
By Leigh Hopper, UCLA
May 21,
2018 -- A new stroke-healing gel created
by UCLA researchers helped regrow neurons and blood vessels in mice whose
brains had been damaged by strokes. The finding is reported May 21 in Nature
Materials.
“We tested this in laboratory mice to determine if it would repair the brain and lead to recovery in a model of stroke,” said Dr. S. Thomas Carmichael, professor of neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “The study indicated that new brain tissue can be regenerated in what was previously just an inactive brain scar after stroke.”
The results suggest that such an approach could some day be
used to treat people who have had a stroke, said Tatiana Segura, a former
professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at UCLA who collaborated on
the research. Segura is now a professor at Duke University .
The brain has a limited capacity for recovery after stroke.
Unlike the liver, skin and some other organs, the brain does not regenerate new
connections, blood vessels or tissue structures after it is damaged. Instead,
dead brain tissue is absorbed, which leaves a cavity devoid of blood vessels,
neurons or axons — the thin nerve fibers that project from neurons.
To see if healthy tissue surrounding the cavity could be
coaxed into healing the stroke injury, Segura
engineered a hydrogel that, when injected into the cavity, thickens to create a
scaffolding into which blood vessels and neurons can grow. The gel is infused
with medications that stimulate blood vessel growth and suppress inflammation,
since inflammation results in scars and impedes functional tissue from
regrowing.
After 16 weeks, the stroke cavities contained regenerated
brain tissue, including new neuronal connections — a result that had not been
seen before. The mice’s ability to reach for food improved, a sign of improved
motor behavior, although the exact mechanism for the improvement wasn’t clear.
“The new axons could actually be working,” Segura
said. “Or the new tissue could be improving the performance of the surrounding,
unharmed brain tissue.”
The gel was eventually absorbed by the body, leaving behind
only new tissue.
The research was designed to explore recovery in acute
stroke, the period immediately following a stroke — in mice, that period lasts
five days; in humans, it’s two months. Next, Carmichael and Segura
plan to investigate whether brain tissue can be regenerated in mice long after
the stroke injury. More than 6 million
Americans are living with long-term effects of stroke, which is known as
chronic stroke.
The other authors of the paper are Lina Nih and Shiva
Gojgini, both of UCLA.
The study was supported by the National Institutes of
Health.
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