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Oudega, Martin
Ph.D. University of Leiden
Research InterestsMy research interest is spinal cord injury and repair and, more specifically, the potential of cellular and a-cellular transplants to reduce secondary injury (limit additional tissue loss), promote axonal regeneration, and increase motor and sensory outcome. In my laboratory, transplants are bemployed alone or in combination with other growth-supporting interventions such as increased levels of growth factors or decreasing the activity of inhibitory factors. These repair strategies are being investigated for their efficacy to elicit anatomical and/or functional restoration after spinal cord injury. The most widely used model for spinal cord injury/repair in my laboratory is an adult rat spinal cord contusion, which models the most frequently occurring human spinal cord injury. My studies especially focus on the repair efficacy of Schwann cells and bone marrow stromal cells, and these are often used in combination with viral vectors to modify these cells prior to transplantation or to modify spinal cord cells near an injury site to secrete extra growth-promoting factors. The repair efficacy of interventions that decrease the level or activity of naturally present growth-inhibitors is also studied in my laboratory especially in the context of axonal growth from an intraspinal graft into the adjacent spinal cord tissue. I also employ a zebrafish spinal cord injury model to elucidate the genes that are crucial for the failure or success of axon regeneration after spinal cord injury. The overall goal of my Spinal Cord Repair Laboratory is to develop spinal cord repair strategies for translation into the clinic.
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