Abstract

One obstacle with grafting of dopamine neurons in Parkinson’s disease is the insufficient ability of the transplant to reinnervate the host striatum. Another issue is the prospective interaction between the donor fetal tissue and the adult astrocytes of the host. To study nerve fiber growth and its interaction with immature/mature astrocytes, ventral mesencephalic (VM) organotypic rat tissue cultures from embryonic days (E) 12, E14, and E18 were studied up to 35 days in vitro (DIV), and co-cultures of E14 VM tissue and mature green fluorescent protein (GFP)-positive astrocytes were performed. Generally, nerve fibers grew from the tissue slice either in association with a monolayer of migrated astroglia surrounding the tissue (glial-associated), or distal to the astroglia as non-glial-associated outgrowth. The tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)-positive glial-associated nerve fiber outgrowth reached a plateau at 21 DIV in E12 and E14 cultures. In E18 cultures, TH-positive neurons displayed short processes and migrated onto the astrocytes. While the non-glial-associated nerve fiber outgrowth dominated the E14 cultures, it was found absent in E18 cultures. The GFP-positive cells in the VM and GFP-positive astrocyte co-cultures were generally located distal to the monolayer of migrated fetal astrocytes, a few GFP-positive cells were however observed within the astrocytic monolayer. In those cases TH-positive neurons migrated towards the GFP-positive cells. Both the non-glial- and glial-associated nerve fibers grew onto the GFP-positive cells. Taken together, the glial-associated growth has limited outgrowth compared to the non-glial-associated nerve fibers, while none of the outgrowth types were hampered by the mature astrocytes.

Highlights

  • One treatment strategy for reducing the symptoms in Parkinson’s disease is to transplant fetal dopamine producing tissue into the dopamine-depleted striatum of parkinsonian patients, restoring the dopamine input to the striatum

  • Astrocytic migration and nerve fiber outgrowth in E12 ventral mesencephalon (VM) culture Vimentin-positive astrocytic migration from the tissue slice in E12 VM cultures reached significantly longer distances at 21 days in vitro (DIV) compared to 14 DIV, and had reached a plateau at 21 DIV (F3,41 = 11.723, p < 0.001, one-way ANOVA; Fig. 1a–e)

  • Astrocytic migration and nerve fiber outgrowth in embryonic day 14 (E14) VM culture Astrocytes migrated for longer distances from the tissue piece at 21 DIV compared to 14 DIV, and at 28 and 35 DIV the difference was significantly strengthened (F3,48 = 15.902, p < 0.001, one-way ANOVA; Fig. 2a–e)

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Summary

Introduction

One treatment strategy for reducing the symptoms in Parkinson’s disease is to transplant fetal dopamine producing tissue into the dopamine-depleted striatum of parkinsonian patients, restoring the dopamine input to the striatum. Knowledge about the interplay between nerve fibers and surrounding cells, such as glia, is important to understand the mechanism behind the reinnervational arrest of the graft. In vitro techniques, such as organotypic tissue culture, are useful to monitor the interaction between dopaminergic neurons and astrocytes. The second wave, which appears around 7 days in vitro (DIV), is dependent on the presence of astrocytes and is called glial-associated nerve fibers. These nerve fibers are persistent over time, and always grow onto astrocytes. Long-term monitoring of the interaction between the nerve fibers and astrocytes is yet to be performed, and may generate valuable information about the reinnervational process and bring understanding to why the graft reinnervation of the host is terminated

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