Litcius/Paper detail

Engineering spinal cord repair

Jordan W. Squair, Matthieu Gautier, Michael V. Sofroniew, Grégoire Courtine, Mark A. Anderson

2021Current Opinion in Biotechnology27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Neurological damage caused by spinal cord injury in humans has been observed for over three thousand years and impacts the lives of several hundred thousand people worldwide. Despite this prevalence and its associated consequences, there is no treatment to repair the injured spinal cord. Evidence gathered over the last several decades has provided mechanistic information on the complex cascade of events following traumatic spinal cord injury and this is paving the way towards mechanism based repair strategies. In this review, we summarize state-of-the-art biological and engineering repair strategies and posit that complete repair will be dependent on cataloguing the molecular signatures and growth requirements of the different neuron subpopulations in the brain and spinal cord.

Topics & Concepts

Spinal cordSpinal cord injuryNeuroscienceMedicineMechanism (biology)BioinformaticsBiologyEpistemologyPhilosophySpinal Cord Injury ResearchNerve injury and regenerationZebrafish Biomedical Research Applications