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Intracerebral Transplantation and <em>In Vivo</em> Bioluminescence Tracking of Human Neural Progenitor Cells in the Mouse Brain
Author(s) -
R. Weber,
Chantal Bodenmann,
Daniela Uhr,
Kathrin J. Zürcher,
Debora Wanner,
Melanie Generali,
Roger M. Nitsch,
Ruslan Rust,
Christian Tackenberg
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of visualized experiments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 1940-087X
DOI - 10.3791/63102
Subject(s) - transplantation , bioluminescence imaging , neural stem cell , progenitor cell , biology , in vivo , green fluorescent protein , stem cell , pathology , luciferase , microbiology and biotechnology , neuroscience , medicine , cell culture , transfection , biochemistry , gene , genetics
Cell therapy has long been an emerging treatment paradigm in experimental neurobiology. However, cell transplantation studies often rely on end-point measurements and can therefore only evaluate longitudinal changes of cell migration and survival to a limited extent. This paper provides a reliable, minimally invasive protocol to transplant and longitudinally track neural progenitor cells (NPCs) in the adult mouse brain. Before transplantation, cells are transduced with a lentiviral vector comprising a bioluminescent (firefly-luciferase) and fluorescent (green fluorescent protein [GFP]) reporter. The NPCs are transplanted into the right cortical hemisphere using stereotaxic injections in the sensorimotor cortex. Following transplantation, grafted cells were detected through the intact skull for up to five weeks (at days 0, 3, 14, 21, 35) with a resolution limit of 6,000 cells using in vivo bioluminescence imaging. Subsequently, the transplanted cells are identified in histological brain sections and further characterized with immunofluorescence. Thus, this protocol provides a valuable tool to transplant, track, quantify, and characterize cells in the mouse brain.

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