Jan Hoeber
Uppsala University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jan Hoeber.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Jan Hoeber; Carl Trolle; Niclas König; Zhongwei Du; Allesandro Gallo; Emmanuel Hermans; Håkan Aldskogius; Peter J. Shortland; Su-Chun Zhang; Ronald Deumens; Elena N. Kozlova
Dorsal root avulsion results in permanent impairment of sensory functions due to disconnection between the peripheral and central nervous system. Improved strategies are therefore needed to reconnect injured sensory neurons with their spinal cord targets in order to achieve functional repair after brachial and lumbosacral plexus avulsion injuries. Here, we show that sensory functions can be restored in the adult mouse if avulsed sensory fibers are bridged with the spinal cord by human neural progenitor (hNP) transplants. Responses to peripheral mechanical sensory stimulation were significantly improved in transplanted animals. Transganglionic tracing showed host sensory axons only in the spinal cord dorsal horn of treated animals. Immunohistochemical analysis confirmed that sensory fibers had grown through the bridge and showed robust survival and differentiation of the transplants. Section of the repaired dorsal roots distal to the transplant completely abolished the behavioral improvement. This demonstrates that hNP transplants promote recovery of sensorimotor functions after dorsal root avulsion, and that these effects are mediated by spinal ingrowth of host sensory axons. These results provide a rationale for the development of novel stem cell-based strategies for functionally useful bridging of the peripheral and central nervous system.
Neurotherapeutics | 2017
Tanya Aggarwal; Jan Hoeber; Patrik Ivert; Svitlana Vasylovska; Elena N. Kozlova
ALS is a devastating disease resulting in degeneration of motor neurons (MNs) in the brain and spinal cord. The survival of MNs strongly depends on surrounding glial cells and neurotrophic support from muscles. We previously demonstrated that boundary cap neural crest stem cells (bNCSCs) can give rise to neurons and glial cells in vitro and in vivo and have multiple beneficial effects on co-cultured and co-implanted cells, including neural cells. In this paper, we investigate if bNCSCs may improve survival of MNs harboring a mutant form of human SOD1 (SOD1G93A) in vitro under normal conditions and oxidative stress and in vivo after implantation to the spinal cord. We found that survival of SOD1G93A MNs in vitro was increased in the presence of bNCSCs under normal conditions as well as under oxidative stress. In addition, when SOD1G93A MN precursors were implanted to the spinal cord of adult mice, their survival was increased when they were co-implanted with bNCSCs. These findings show that bNCSCs support survival of SOD1G93A MNs in normal conditions and under oxidative stress in vitro and improve their survival in vivo, suggesting that bNCSCs have a potential for the development of novel stem cell-based therapeutic approaches in ALS models.
Neural Regeneration Research | 2015
Jan Hoeber
Brachial as well as lumbosacral plexus avulsion injuries are usually caused by high kinetic traumas, such as car-pedestrian, car and motorcycle accidents or falls from great heights. Traction forces affecting the head and shoulders or extremities pull the spinal nerve sleeves away from the spinal cord and rupture the postganglionic spinal root from the cord. In so called central avulsion injuries, the spinal root is avulsed at the interface between the central and peripheral nervous system (CNS and PNS). This results not only in the disconnection of the root from the cord but also in a longitudinal spinal cord injury. The complexity of the injury leads to degeneration of the spinal root and a marked inflammatory response of the spinal cord followed by the formation of a glial scar (Kachramanoglou et al., 2011).
Cell and Tissue Research | 2018
Nikos Schizas; Niclas König; Brittmarie Andersson; Svitlana Vasylovska; Jan Hoeber; Elena N. Kozlova; Nils P. Hailer
The acute phase of spinal cord injury is characterized by excitotoxic and inflammatory events that mediate extensive neuronal loss in the gray matter. Neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) can exert neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory effects that may be mediated by soluble factors. We therefore hypothesize that transplantation of NCSCs to acutely injured spinal cord slice cultures (SCSCs) can prevent neuronal loss after excitotoxic injury. NCSCs were applied onto SCSCs previously subjected to N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA)-induced injury. Immunohistochemistry and TUNEL staining were used to quantitatively study cell populations and apoptosis. Concentrations of neurotrophic factors were measured by ELISA. Migration and differentiation properties of NCSCs on SCSCs, laminin, or hyaluronic acid hydrogel were separately studied. NCSCs counteracted the loss of NeuN-positive neurons that was otherwise observed after NMDA-induced excitotoxicity, partly by inhibiting neuronal apoptosis. They also reduced activation of both microglial cells and astrocytes. The concentration of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) was increased in supernatants from SCSCs cultured with NCSCs compared to SCSCs alone and BDNF alone mimicked the effects of NCSC application on SCSCs. NCSCs migrated superficially across the surface of SCSCs and showed no signs of neuronal or glial differentiation but preserved their expression of SOX2 and Krox20. In conclusion, NCSCs exert neuroprotective, anti-apoptotic and glia-inhibitory effects on excitotoxically injured spinal cord tissue, some of these effects mediated by secretion of BDNF. However, the investigated NCSCs seem not to undergo neuronal or glial differentiation in the short term since markers indicative of an undifferentiated state were expressed during the entire observation period.
Regenerative Medicine | 2017
Carl Trolle; Patrik Ivert; Jan Hoeber; Iris Rocamonde-Lago; Svitlana Vasylovska; Eugen Lukanidin; Elena N. Kozlova
AIM During development, boundary cap neural crest stem cells (bNCSCs) assist sensory axon growth into the spinal cord. Here we repositioned them to test if they assist regeneration of sensory axons in adult mice after dorsal root avulsion injury. MATERIALS & METHODS Avulsed mice received bNCSC or human neural progenitor (hNP) cell transplants and their contributions to glial scar formation and sensory axon regeneration were analyzed with immunohistochemistry and transganglionic tracing. RESULTS hNPs and bNCSCs form similar gaps in the glial scar, but unlike hNPs, bNCSCs contribute Mts1/S100A4 (calcium-binding protein) expression to the scar and do not assist sensory axon regeneration. CONCLUSION bNCSC transplants contribute nonpermissive Mts1/S100A4-expressing cells to the glial scar after dorsal root avulsion.
Journal of Stem Cell Research & Therapeutics | 2017
Patrik Ivert; Alex; er Otterbeck; Michael Panchenko; Jan Hoeber; Svitlana Vasylovska; Chunfang Zhou; Alfonso E. Garcia-Bennett; Elena N. Kozlova
Mesoporous silica particles (MSPs) are characterized by ordered porosity, sharp pore size distributions, high internal surface areas, and large pore volumes.1,2 Control over these structural parameters makes them an ideal candidate for drug encapsulation, perfectly suited to uptake and carry large amounts of drugs that then get released with constant concentration.3–5 The release of the actives can be diffusion controlled or may be triggered by a change in media temperature or pH.6 Creation of simultaneous release profiles is possible by using different pore structures (e. g., 2D hexagonal and 3D cubic) that enable a continuous discharge of a fine tuned mixture of active drugs over a given period of time.
Archive | 2015
Nikos Schizas; Niclas König; Brittmarie Andersson; Svitlana Vasylovska; Jan Hoeber; Elena N Kozlova; Nils P. Hailer
Stem Cells and Development | 2017
Jan Hoeber; Niclas König; Carl Trolle; Emilia Lekholm; Chunfang Zhou; Stanislava Pankratova; Elisabet Åkesson; Robert Fredriksson; Håkan Aldskogius; Elena N. Kozlova
Archive | 2015
Niclas König; Jan Hoeber; Carl Trolle; Alfonso E. Garcia-Bennett; Vladimir Berezin; Elisabet Åkesson; Elena N Kozlova
Archive | 2015
Jan Hoeber; Niclas König; Carl Trolle; Alfonso E. Garcia-Bennett; Vladimir Berezin; Elisabet Åkesson; Håkan Aldskogius; Elena N Kozlova