Polysialic-Acid-Based Micelles Promote Neural Regeneration in Spinal Cord Injury Therapy
Posted on 2019-01-03 - 00:00
Spinal cord injury
(SCI) routinely causes the immediate loss and
disruption of neurons followed by complicated secondary injuries,
including inflammation, oxidative stress, and dense glial scar formation.
Inhibitory factors in the lesion scar and poor intrinsic neural regeneration
capacity restrict functional recovery after injury. Minocycline, which
has neuroprotective activity, can alleviate secondary injury, but
the long-term administration of this drug may cause toxicity. Polysialic
acid (PSA) is a large cell-surface carbohydrate that is critical for
central nervous system development and is capable of promoting precursor
cell migration, axon path finding, and synaptic remodeling; thus,
PSA plays a vital role in tissue repair and regeneration. Here, we
developed a PSA-based minocycline-loaded nanodrug delivery system
(PSM) for the synergistic therapy of spinal cord injury. The prepared
PSM exerted marked anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective activities
both in vitro and in vivo. The administration of PSM could significantly
protect neurons and myelin sheaths from damage, reduce the formation
of glial scar, recruit endogenous neural stem cells to the lesion
site, and promote the regeneration of neurons and the extension of
long axons throughout the glial scar, thereby largely improving the
locomotor function of SCI rats and exerting a superior therapeutic
effect. The findings might provide a novel strategy for SCI synergistic
therapy and the utilization of PSA in other central nervous system
diseases.