Litcius/Paper detail

Neural stem cell therapy for brain disease

Lan Zhao, Jianwei Liu, Huiyan Shi, Yamin Ma

2021World Journal of Stem Cells59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Brain diseases, including brain tumors, neurodegenerative disorders, cerebrovascular diseases, and traumatic brain injuries, are among the major disorders influencing human health, currently with no effective therapy. Due to the low regeneration capacity of neurons, insufficient secretion of neurotrophic factors, and the aggravation of ischemia and hypoxia after nerve injury, irreversible loss of functional neurons and nerve tissue damage occurs. This damage is difficult to repair and regenerate the central nervous system after injury. Neural stem cells (NSCs) are pluripotent stem cells that only exist in the central nervous system. They have good self-renewal potential and ability to differentiate into neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes and improve the cellular microenvironment. NSC transplantation approaches have been made for various neurodegenerative disorders based on their regenerative potential. This review summarizes and discusses the characteristics of NSCs, and the advantages and effects of NSCs in the treatment of brain diseases and limitations of NSC transplantation that need to be addressed for the treatment of brain diseases in the future.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceNeural stem cellMedicineTransplantationInduced pluripotent stem cellTraumatic brain injuryCentral nervous systemStem cellNeurotrophic factorsRegeneration (biology)Stem-cell therapyBrain damageRegenerative medicineEmbryonic stem cellBiologySurgeryInternal medicineCell biologyPsychiatryGeneReceptorBiochemistryNeurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanismsPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchNuclear Receptors and Signaling
Neural stem cell therapy for brain disease | Litcius