Spinal cord injury (SCI) induces a permanent disability in patients. To this day no curative treatment can be proposed to restore lost functions. Therefore, extensive experimental studies have been conducted to induce recovery after SCI. One of the most promising therapies is based on the use of olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs). OECs can be obtained from either the olfactory bulbs (OB-OECs) or from olfactory mucosa (OM-OECs), involving a less invasive approach for autotransplantation. However the vast majority of experimental transplantations have been focusing on OB-OECs although the OM represents a more accessible source of OECs. Importantly, the ability of OM-OECs in comparison to OB-OECs to induce spinal cord recovery in the same lesion paradigm has never been described. We here present data using a multiparametric approach, based on electrophysiological, behavioral, histological and magnetic resonance imaging experiments on the repair potential of OB-OECs and OM-OECs from either primary or purified cultures after a severe model of SCI. Our data demonstrate that transplantation of OECs obtained from OB or OM induces electrophysiological and functional recovery, reduces astrocyte reactivity and glial scar formation and improves axonal regrowth. We also show that the purification step is essential for OM-OECs while not required for OB-OECs. Altogether, our study strongly indicates that transplantation of OECs from OM represents the best benefit/risk ratio according to the safety of access of OM and the results induced by transplantations of OM-OECs. Indeed, purified OM-OECs in addition to induce recovery can integrate and survive up to 60 days into the spinal cord. Therefore, our results provide strong support for these cells as a viable therapy for SCI.
Development of the spinal cord requires dynamic and tightly controlled expression of numerous transcription factors. Forkhead Box protein J1 (FoxJ1) is a transcription factor involved in ciliogenesis and is specifically expressed in ependymal cells (ECs) in the adult central nervous system. However, using FoxJ1 fate-mapping mouse lines, we observed that FoxJ1 is also transiently expressed by the progenitors of other neural subtypes during development. Moreover, using a knock-in mouse line, we discovered that FoxJ1 is essential for embryonic progenitors to follow a normal developmental trajectory. FoxJ1 loss perturbed embryonic progenitor proliferation and cell fate determination, and resulted in formation of adult ECs having impaired stem cell potential and an inability to respond to spinal cord injury in both male and female animals. Thus, our study uncovers unexpected developmental functions of FoxJ1 in cell fate determination of subsets of neural cells and suggests that FoxJ1 is critical for maintaining the stem cell potential of ECs into adulthood.
Olfactory ensheathing cells (OECs) play a crucial role during neurogenesis of primary olfactory neurons. Transplantation of OECs is considered as a promising new therapy for central nervous system repair. Nevertheless, OECs are constituted of distinct subpopulations and their role during neurogenesis is not clearly understood. In particular, OECs from the olfactory bulb (OB) constitute a heterogeneous, but not yet isolated and characterized, population of cells. In our study, flow cytometry analyses of primary OB cultures, based on cell surface expression of low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor (p75), reveal the presence of two distinct populations of OECs. Indeed, some of them express a high level of p75 (P75High) and the other a low level of p75 (P75Low). Effects of OB microenvironment were assessed, and we were able to show that fibroblasts mediate the induction of these two populations through the secretion of soluble factors. To characterize P75High and P75Low OECs, cells were sorted based on their differential expression of p75. Microarray analyses revealed that P75High OECs overexpress genes implicated in modulation of extracellular matrix and cell sorting, whereas P75Low OECs overexpress genes involved in regulation of the inflammatory response and axonal guidance. These results permit, for the first time, to isolate the two distinct subpopulations of OECs from OB, and suggest their specific role during neurogenesis.
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