Neural Regeneration Research ›› 2025, Vol. 20 ›› Issue (4): 1192-1206.doi: 10.4103/NRR.NRR-D-23-01220

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Polyethylene glycol has immunoprotective effects on sciatic allografts, but behavioral recovery and graft tolerance require neurorrhaphy and axonal fusion

Tyler A. Smith1, Liwen Zhou2, Cameron L. Ghergherehchi1, Michelle Mikesh2, Cathy Z. Yang2, Haley O. Tucker1, JuliAnne Allgood3, Jared S. Bushman3, George D. Bittner2, *   

  1. 1Department of Molecular Biosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA; 2Department of Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA; 3Division of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, USA
  • Online:2025-04-15 Published:2024-07-03
  • Contact: George D. Bittner, PhD, bittner@austin.utexas.edu.
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by grants from the Lone Star Paralysis Foundation, NIH R01NS081063, and Department of Defense award W81XWH-19-2-0054 to GDB. This work was also supported by University of Wyoming Startup funds, Department of Defense grant W81XWH-17-1-0402, the University of Wyoming Sensory Biology COBRE under National Institutes of Health (NIH) award number 5P20GM121310-02, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the NIH under award number P20GM103432 to JSB. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the US Department of Defense, NIH, The University of Texas, or the University of Wyoming.

Abstract: Behavioral recovery using (viable) peripheral nerve allografts to repair ablation-type (segmental-loss) peripheral nerve injuries is delayed or poor due to slow and inaccurate axonal regeneration. Furthermore, such peripheral nerve allografts undergo immunological rejection by the host immune system. In contrast, peripheral nerve injuries repaired by polyethylene glycol fusion of peripheral nerve allografts exhibit excellent behavioral recovery within weeks, reduced immune responses, and many axons do not undergo Wallerian degeneration. The relative contribution of neurorrhaphy and polyethylene glycol-fusion of axons versus the effects of polyethylene glycol  per se  was unknown prior to this study. We hypothesized that polyethylene glycol might have some immune-protective effects, but polyethylene glycol-fusion was necessary to prevent Wallerian degeneration and functional/behavioral recovery. We examined how polyethylene glycol solutions  per se  affect functional and behavioral recovery and peripheral nerve allograft morphological and immunological responses in the absence of polyethylene glycol-induced axonal fusion. Ablation-type sciatic nerve injuries in outbred Sprague–Dawley rats were repaired according to a modified protocol using the same solutions as polyethylene glycol-fused peripheral nerve allografts, but peripheral nerve allografts were loose-sutured (loose-sutured polyethylene glycol) with an intentional gap of 1–2 mm to prevent fusion by polyethylene glycol of peripheral nerve allograft axons with host axons. Similar to negative control peripheral nerve allografts not treated by polyethylene glycol and in contrast to polyethylene glycol-fused peripheral nerve allografts, animals with  loose-sutured polyethylene glycol peripheral nerve allografts exhibited Wallerian degeneration for all axons and myelin degeneration by 7 days postoperatively and did not recover sciatic-mediated behavioral functions by 42 days postoperatively. Other morphological signs of rejection, such as collapsed Schwann cell basal lamina tubes, were absent in polyethylene glycol-fused peripheral nerve allografts but commonly observed in negative control and loose-sutured polyethylene glycol peripheral nerve allografts at 21 days postoperatively. Loose-sutured polyethylene glycol peripheral nerve allografts had more pro-inflammatory and less anti-inflammatory macrophages than negative control peripheral nerve allografts. While T cell counts were similarly high in loose-sutured-polyethylene glycol and negative control peripheral nerve allografts, loose-sutured polyethylene glycol peripheral nerve allografts expressed some cytokines/chemokines important for T cell activation at much lower levels at 14 days postoperatively. MHCI expression was elevated in loose-sutured polyethylene glycol peripheral nerve allografts, but MHCII expression was modestly lower compared to negative control at 21 days postoperatively. We conclude that, while polyethylene glycol per se reduces some immune responses of peripheral nerve allografts, successful polyethylene glycol-fusion repair of some axons is necessary to prevent Wallerian degeneration of those axons and immune rejection of peripheral nerve allografts, and produce recovery of sensory/motor functions and voluntary behaviors. Translation of polyethylene glycol-fusion technologies would produce a paradigm shift from the current clinical practice of waiting days to months to repair ablation peripheral nerve injuries.

Key words: allograft rejection, axotomy, macrophage, myelin, nerve repair, polyethylene glycol (PEG), sciatic nerve, T cell, transplantation, Wallerian degeneration