Anatomically complete spinal cord injury (SCI) transects and eliminates all functional connections across the level of the lesion, and in adults, axons fail to regrow spontaneously across such lesions. Restoring voluntary control of function will require interventions to establish new neural connections across the lesion. During the previous funding cycle of this grant, we identified a mechanism-based biological repair strategy for achieving robust regrowth of propriospinal axons across complete SCI lesions in rodents. We showed that providing three mechanisms essential for axon growth during development, (i) neuron intrinsic growth capacity, (ii) growth-supportive substrate and (iii) chemoattraction, can achieve robust regrowth of axons through and beyond anatomically complete SCI. This axon regrowth was 100-fold greater than controls, passed a full spinal segment beyond the injuries, and was able to restore significant electrophysiological conduction capacity across injuries. To achieve the spatially and temporally controlled in vivo molecular delivery required to realize this axon regrowth, we engineered biomaterial depots that enabled us to mimic certain spatiotemporal events regulating axon growth during development. In the project proposed here, we will build on this work and use our newly developed synthetic hydrogel vehicle to deliver molecules that direct the differentiation in vivo of grafted neural progenitor cells (NPC) into axon-supportive immature astroglia that repopulate non-neural lesion cores and reestablish a multicellular neural environment favorable for long term support of host propriospinal axons chemoattracted to regrow through lesions into spared neural tissue. Our hypothesis is that repopulating (and ?reneuralizing?) such non-neural lesion cores, or their cysts, with immature astroglia will promote long-term axonal maintenance and provide a favorable niche for remyelinating cells. Our objective is to develop engineering approaches that facilitate doing so. Our premise is that our hydrogel vehicles can deliver both: (i) molecules that direct the differentiation of NPC in vivo, and (ii) molecules that chemoattract host axons. Our past work and preliminary data show that NPC grafted in our hydrogel vehicles are good candidates to generate support cells for host axons as well as for host-derived oligodendrocyte progenitor cells that migrate into areas of grafted cells. We have also shown that propriospinal neurons are good targets for bridging host axons across complete SCI lesions into spared neural tissue below injuries. The work for this proposal will advance the development of mechanism- based engineering approaches to repair neural tissue after severe SCI, stroke and other CNS disorders with large focal lesions.

Public Health Relevance

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a major cause of long term disability with devastating consequences for the individual and a substantial economic burden to society. One important strategy for improving outcome after SCI is to stimulate nerve fibers (axons) to regrow across lesions to form new connections. In this project, we continue and expand our development of biomaterials that: (i) can easily and safely be injected into the spinal cord to deliver molecules that stimulate and guide axon growth through SCI lesions to reach neural targets in healthy tissue, (ii) have safety profiles compatible with clinical translation, and (iii) can serve as vehicles for neural stem cells grafts that can be directed to form neural support cells called glia, which can support and maintain regrowing axons.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01NS084030-05
Application #
9737685
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Bambrick, Linda Louise
Project Start
2014-08-01
Project End
2024-03-31
Budget Start
2019-04-01
Budget End
2020-03-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Los Angeles
Department
Neurosciences
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
092530369
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90095
Anderson, Mark A; O'Shea, Timothy M; Burda, Joshua E et al. (2018) Required growth facilitators propel axon regeneration across complete spinal cord injury. Nature 561:396-400
Wollenberg, A L; O'Shea, T M; Kim, J H et al. (2018) Injectable polypeptide hydrogels via methionine modification for neural stem cell delivery. Biomaterials 178:527-545
O'Shea, Timothy M; Burda, Joshua E; Sofroniew, Michael V (2017) Cell biology of spinal cord injury and repair. J Clin Invest 127:3259-3270
Horng, Sam; Therattil, Anthony; Moyon, Sarah et al. (2017) Astrocytic tight junctions control inflammatory CNS lesion pathogenesis. J Clin Invest 127:3136-3151
Anderson, Mark A; Burda, Joshua E; Ren, Yilong et al. (2016) Astrocyte scar formation aids central nervous system axon regeneration. Nature 532:195-200
Burda, Joshua E; Bernstein, Alexander M; Sofroniew, Michael V (2016) Astrocyte roles in traumatic brain injury. Exp Neurol 275 Pt 3:305-315
Xu, Ji; Bernstein, Alexander M; Wong, Angela et al. (2016) P2X4 Receptor Reporter Mice: Sparse Brain Expression and Feeding-Related Presynaptic Facilitation in the Arcuate Nucleus. J Neurosci 36:8902-20
Sofroniew, Michael V (2015) Astrocyte barriers to neurotoxic inflammation. Nat Rev Neurosci 16:249-63
Zhang, Shanshan; Alvarez, Daniel J; Sofroniew, Michael V et al. (2015) Design and synthesis of nonionic copolypeptide hydrogels with reversible thermoresponsive and tunable physical properties. Biomacromolecules 16:1331-40
Zhang, Shanshan; Burda, Joshua E; Anderson, Mark A et al. (2015) Thermoresponsive Copolypeptide Hydrogel Vehicles for Central Nervous System Cell Delivery. ACS Biomater Sci Eng 1:705-717

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