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Dive into the research topics where Rachael E. Ward is active.

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Featured researches published by Rachael E. Ward.


Journal of Neurocytology | 2003

Transplantation of olfactory ensheathing cells fails to promote significant axonal regeneration from dorsal roots into the rat cervical cord

Vilma Muñetón Goméz; Sharon Averill; Von R. King; Qin Yang; Ernesto Doncel Pérez; Sara Caballero Chacón; Rachael E. Ward; Manuel Nieto-Sampedro; John V. Priestley; Julian Taylor

The olfactory ensheathing cell (OEC) is a class of glial cell that has been reported to support regeneration in the central nervous system after various types of lesions, including rhizotomy of spinal dorsal roots at thoracic, lumbar and sacral levels. We have therefore carried out a detailed anatomical analysis to assess the efficacy of dorsal horn OEC transplants at promoting regeneration of primary afferents across the dorsal root entry zone (DREZ) at the cervical level in the adult rat. OECs were cultured from adult rat olfactory bulb and immunopurified (90% purity). Regeneration by large diameter afferents and by both peptidergic and non-peptidergic small diameter afferents was assessed using respectively cholera toxin B (CTB) labelling and immunocytochemistry for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and the purinoceptor P2X3. Following an extensive (C3-T3) rhizotomy, CGRP and P2X3 immunoreactive axons regenerated across the rhizotomy site as far as the DREZ but there was no evidence of regeneration across the DREZ, except through sites where the OEC transplant was directly grafted into the DREZ. No evidence of regeneration into the dorsal horn by CTB-labelled axons was obtained. In addition, there was little sign of sprouting by intact axons in the vicinity of OEC transplant sites. In contrast to these results in vivo, cocultures of OECs and adult dorsal root ganglion cells showed that OECs stimulate extensive neurite outgrowth. The failure of the OECs to promote regeneration in vivo following cervical rhizotomy is therefore most likely due to factors in the environment of the graft site and/or the method of transplantation.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2010

Docosahexaenoic Acid Prevents White Matter Damage after Spinal Cord Injury

Rachael E. Ward; Wenlong Huang; Olympia E. Curran; John V. Priestley; Adina Michael-Titus

We have previously shown that the omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) significantly improves several histological and behavioral measures after spinal cord injury (SCI). White matter damage plays a key role in neurological outcome following SCI. Therefore, we examined the effects of the acute intravenous (IV) administration of DHA (250 nmol/kg) 30 min after thoracic compression SCI in rats, alone or in combination with a DHA-enriched diet (400 mg/kg/d, administered for 6 weeks post-injury), on white matter pathology. By 1 week post-injury, the acute IV DHA injection led to significantly reduced axonal dysfunction, as indicated by accumulation of β-amyloid precursor protein (-55% compared to vehicle-injected controls) in the dorsal columns. The loss of cytoskeletal proteins following SCI was also significantly reduced. There were 43% and 73% more axons immunoreactive for non-phosphorylated 200-kD neurofilament in the ventral white matter and ventrolateral white matter, respectively, in animals receiving DHA injections than vehicle-injected rats. The acute DHA treatment also led to a significant improvement in microtubule-associated protein-2 immunoreactivity. By 6 weeks, damage to myelin and serotonergic fibers was also reduced. For some of the parameters measured, the combination of DHA injection and DHA-enriched diet led to greater neuroprotection than DHA injection alone. These findings demonstrate the therapeutic potential of DHA in SCI, and clearly indicate that this fatty acid confers significant protection to the white matter.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2007

Retinoid receptors in chronic degeneration of the spinal cord: observations in a rat model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Natasa Jokic; Yong Yong Ling; Rachael E. Ward; Adina Michael-Titus; John V. Priestley; Andrea Malaspina

Changes in distribution and expression of retinoid receptors may be part of a spinal cord protective response to acute injury and to chronic degeneration. In this study, we have combined RNA and protein expression analysis to characterize the expression profile of retinoid receptors in the lumbar spinal cord of the superoxide dismutase 1 G93A mutant rat model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a fatal neurodegenerative disorder causing extensive motor neuron loss. We also report a nonsignificant change in RNA expression of binding proteins and metabolizing enzymes for retinol and retinoic acid in the mutant rat spinal cord at end‐stage disease. Only retinoid X receptor beta (RXRbeta), and to a lesser extent retinoic acid receptor beta and alpha (RARbeta/alpha) were reliably detected in lumbar spinal cord at an early pre‐symptomatic phase and throughout the disease progression. The expression of RXRbeta in lamina II neurons in the dorsal horn of transgenic and wild type (WT) animals was associated with extensive astrocyte staining in end‐stage lumbar spinal cord from transgenic rats. RARbeta and RARalpha diffuse staining of large motor neurons in the pre‐symptomatic transgenic and in the WT lumbar cord appear to decline in end‐stage disease, when a selective and strong gamma motor neuron RARalpha staining becomes evident. As gliosis and motor neuron loss are key pathogenic features in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, the selective expression of retinoid receptors in astrocytes and motor neurons may provide further clues to the role of retinoid signalling in neurodegeneration and suggest new treatment strategies based on retinoid‐modulating agents.


Prostaglandins Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids | 2010

The acute administration of eicosapentaenoic acid is neuroprotective after spinal cord compression injury in rats

Siew-Na Lim; Wenlong Huang; Jodie C.E. Hall; Rachael E. Ward; John V. Priestley; Adina Michael-Titus

The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of treatment with eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) after spinal cord compression injury in adult rats. Saline or EPA (250 nmol/kg) was administered intravenously 30 min after compression injury. Locomotor recovery was assessed daily using the BBB open-field locomotor score. One week after injury, animals were sacrificed and the spinal cord tissue containing the compression epicenter, and the adjacent rostral and caudal segments, was immunostained using specific markers for neurons, oligodendrocytes, axonal injury, and macrophages/microglia. Administration of EPA resulted in decreased axonal injury and increased neuronal and oligodendrocyte survival, in the lesion epicenter and adjacent tissue. The behavioural assessment mirrored the neuroprotective effects and showed a significantly improved functional recovery in animals treated with EPA compared to the saline-treated controls over the 7-day period. These observations suggest that EPA has neuroprotective properties when administered after spinal cord trauma.


Neuroscience | 2014

A characterization of white matter pathology following spinal cord compression injury in the rat

Rachael E. Ward; W. Huang; M. Kostusiak; Patrick N. Pallier; Adina Michael-Titus; John V. Priestley

Our laboratory has previously described the characteristics of neuronal injury in a rat compression model of spinal cord injury (SCI), focussing on the impact of this injury on the gray matter. However, white matter damage is known to play a critical role in functional outcome following injury. Therefore, in the present study, we used immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy to examine the alterations to the white matter that are initiated by compression SCI applied at T12 vertebral level. A significant loss of axonal and dendritic cytoskeletal proteins was observed at the injury epicenter within 1day of injury. This was accompanied by axonal dysfunction, as demonstrated by the accumulation of β-amyloid precursor protein (β-APP), with a peak at 3days post-SCI. A similar, acute loss of cytoskeletal proteins was observed up to 5mm away from the injury epicenter and was particularly evident rostral to the lesion site, whereas β-APP accumulation was prominent in tracts proximal to the injury. Early myelin loss was confirmed by myelin basic protein (MBP) immunostaining and by electron microscopy, which also highlighted the infiltration of inflammatory and red blood cells. However, 6weeks after injury, areas of new Schwann cell and oligodendrocyte myelination were observed. This study demonstrates that substantial white matter damage occurs following compression SCI in the rat. Moreover, the loss of cytoskeletal proteins and accumulation of β-APP up to 5mm away from the lesion site within 1day of injury indicates the rapid manner in which the axonal damage extends in the rostro-caudal axis. This is likely due to both Wallerian degeneration and spread of secondary cell death, with the latter affecting axons both proximal and distal to the injury.


Neuroscience | 2010

The effect of mechanical strain or hypoxia on cell death in subpopulations of rat dorsal root ganglion neurons in vitro

Stacy Gladman; Rachael E. Ward; Adina Michael-Titus; Martin M. Knight; John V. Priestley

Spinal nerves and their associated dorsal root ganglion (DRG) cells can be subject to mechanical deformation and hypoxia associated with pathology such as disc herniation, spinal stenosis and spine trauma. There is very limited information on the response of adult DRG neurons to such stressors. In this study we used an in vitro approach to examine the response of adult DRG cells to (a) mechanical, hypoxic, and combined injuries; and (b) to compare the effects on injury on nociceptive and non-nociceptive neurons, as well as on non-neuronal cells. Mechanical injury (20% tensile strain) led to significant neuronal cell death (assessed by ethidium homodimer-1 labelling), which was proportional to strain duration (5 min, 1 h, 6 h or 18 h). Hypoxia (2% O(2) for 24 h) also promoted death of DRG neurons, and was further enhanced when mechanical strain and hypoxia were combined. Both mechanical strain and hypoxia significantly decreased the maximum neurite length. Conversely, death of non-neuronal cells was only increased by hypoxia and not by mechanical strain. Total cell death in response to mechanical injury or hypoxia was similar in both non-nociceptive (neurofilament, NF-200 immunoreactive) and nociceptive (calcitonin gene-related peptide, CGRP immunoreactive) neurons, but apoptosis (assessed by activated caspase-3 immunostaining) was significantly higher in CGRP than NF-200 neurons. Surprisingly, cell death of non-peptidergic nociceptors (identified by Griffonia simplicifolia IB4 lectin binding) was already high in control cultures, and was not increased further by either mechanical stretch or hypoxia. These results provide detailed information on the response of adult DRG subpopulations to hypoxia and mechanical strain, and describe in vitro models that could be useful for screening potential neuroprotective agents.


Neuroscience | 2010

ACTIVATION TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR-3 ACTIVATION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF SPINAL CORD DEGENERATION IN A RAT MODEL OF AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS

Andrea Malaspina; S.F.A. Ngoh; Rachael E. Ward; Jodie C.E. Hall; F.W.D. Tai; Ping K. Yip; C. Jones; Natasa Jokic; Sharon Averill; Adina Michael-Titus; John V. Priestley

It has been reported that an early activation of glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP) in astroglial cells occurs simultaneously in peripheral nerves and spinal cord from the G93A SOD1 mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), an invariably fatal neurodegenerative disorder. In ALS, the contribute to the pathological process of different cell types varies according to the disease stage, with a florid immune response in spinal cord at end stage disease. In this study, we have mapped in different anatomical sites the process of disease-induced functional perturbation from a pre-symptomatic stage using a marker of cellular distress expressed in neurons and glial cells, the activating transcription factor 3 (ATF-3), and applied large-scale gene expression analysis to define the pattern or transcriptional changes occurring in spinal cord from the G93A SOD1 rat model of ALS in parallel with ATF-3 neuronal activation. From the disease onset onward, transgenic lumbar spinal cord displayed ATF-3 transcriptional regulation and motor cells immunostaining in association with the over-expression of genes promoting cell growth, the functional integrity of cell organelles and involved in the modulation of immune responses. While spinal cord from the pre-symptomatic rat showed no detectable ATF-3 transcriptional regulation, ATF-3 activation was appreciated in large size neurofilament-rich, small size non-peptidergic and parvalbumin-positive neurons within the dorsal root ganglia (DRG), and in ventral roots Schwann cells alongside macrophages infiltration. This pattern of peripheral ATF-3 activation remained detectable throughout the disease process. In the G93A SOD1 rat model of ALS, signs of roots and nerves subtle distress preceded overt clinical-pathological changes, involving both glial cells and neurons that function as receptors of peripheral sensory stimuli from the muscle. In addition, factors previously described to be linked to ATF-3 activation under various experimental conditions of stress, become switched on in spinal cord from the end-stage transgenic rat model of ALS.


Brain | 2007

A combination of intravenous and dietary docosahexaenoic acid significantly improves outcome after spinal cord injury.

Wenlong L. Huang; Von R. King; Olympia E. Curran; Simon C. Dyall; Rachael E. Ward; N. Lal; John V. Priestley; Adina Michael-Titus


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2009

Arachidonyl trifluoromethyl ketone is neuroprotective after spinal cord injury

Wenlong Huang; Amar Bhavsar; Rachael E. Ward; Jodie C.E. Hall; John V. Priestley; Adina Michael-Titus


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2010

Docosahexaenoic acid prevents white matter damage following spinal cord injury

Rachael E. Ward; Wenlong Huang; Olympia E. Curran; John V. Priestley; Adina Michael-Titus

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John V. Priestley

Queen Mary University of London

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Adina Michael-Titus

Queen Mary University of London

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Wenlong Huang

Queen Mary University of London

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Olympia E. Curran

Queen Mary University of London

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Andrea Malaspina

Queen Mary University of London

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Natasa Jokic

Queen Mary University of London

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Sharon Averill

Queen Mary University of London

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Von R. King

Queen Mary University of London

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C. Jones

Queen Mary University of London

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