Epilepsy is a common neurological disease and its most common type is temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Novel therapeutics is needed as many TLE patients are resistant to treatments like anticonvulsants or temporal lobectomy. Stem cell therapy has great promise in regeneration medicine. In the current study, we tried to investigate the potential protective effects of adipose-derived stem cell (ADSC) transplantation in epileptic rats. Epilepsy model was established by intra-hippocampal injection of kainic acid (KA) in rats. ADSCs were isolated, differentiated and transplanted into hippocampus of KA rats. There were three groups of rats: normal control group receiving saline injection and no transplantation, KA + sham group receiving KA injection and sham transplantation surgery and KA + transplantation group receiving KA injection and ADSC transplantation. We found that ADSCs were highly positive for CD44, CD90, CD29 and CD105, and neural differentiation induced the expression of neuronal markers like Tuj1, MAP2, NeuN and PSD-95. EEG recording showed that KA induced seizure activity while ADSC transplantation inhibited seizure activity. In training session of Morris water maze task, KA injection impaired the learning capacity of rats while ADSC transplantation restored the learning capacity at 2-week or 2-month post transplantation. In probe session of Morris water maze task, KA injection impaired the memory of rats while ADSC transplantation restored the memory at 2-week or 2-month post transplantation. Transplanted ADSCs released BDNF, NT3 and NT4. Pro-apoptotic BAX was reduced while anti-apoptotic BCL-2 and BCL-xL were increased in hippocampus post ADSC transplantation. Our study suggests that ADSC transplantation inhibits KA-induced seizures and improves the learning and memory function of epileptic rats.
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