Neural Regeneration Research ›› 2026, Vol. 21 ›› Issue (3): 1162-1171.doi: 10.4103/NRR.NRR-D-24-00363

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Transplantation of human neural stem cells repairs neural circuits and restores neurological function in the stroke-injured brain

Peipei Wang1 , Peng Liu1 , Yingying Ding1 , Guirong Zhang2 , Nan Wang1 , Xiaodong Sun1 , Mingyue Li2 , Mo Li1 , Xinjie Bao3, *, Xiaowei Chen1, *   

  1. 1 Beijing Yinfeng Dingcheng Biological Engineering Technology Co., Ltd., Beijing, China;  2 Yinfeng Biological Group., Ltd., Jinan, Shandong Province, China;  3 Department of Neurosurgery, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China
  • Online:2026-03-15 Published:2025-07-05
  • Contact: Xinjie Bao, MD, xinjieabao@163.com; Xiaowei Chen, bjyfcxw@163.com.

Abstract: Exogenous neural stem cell transplantation has become one of the most promising treatment methods for chronic stroke. Recent studies have shown that most ischemia-reperfusion model rats recover spontaneously after injury, which limits the ability to observe long-term behavioral recovery. Here, we used a severe stroke rat model with 150 minutes of ischemia, which produced severe behavioral deficiencies that persisted at 12 weeks, to study the therapeutic effect of neural stem cells on neural restoration in chronic stroke. Our study showed that stroke model rats treated with human neural stem cells had long-term sustained recovery of motor function, reduced infarction volume, long-term human neural stem cell survival, and improved local inflammatory environment and angiogenesis. We also demonstrated that transplanted human neural stem cells differentiated into mature neurons in vivo, formed stable functional synaptic connections with host neurons, and exhibited the electrophysiological properties of functional mature neurons, indicating that they replaced the damaged host neurons. The findings showed that human fetal-derived neural stem cells had long-term effects for neurological recovery in a model of severe stroke, which suggests that human neural stem cells-based therapy may be effective for repairing damaged neural circuits in stroke patients.

Key words: behavioral recovery, circuit repair, electrophysiological properties, functional integration, human neural stem cell transplantation, infarction volume, stroke, synaptic tracing