Increasingly, patients affected by metabolic diseases affecting the central nervous system and neuroinflammatory disorders receive hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) in the attempt to slow the course of their disease, delay or attenuate symptoms, and improve pathologic findings. The possible replacement of brain-resident myeloid cells by the transplanted cell progeny contributes to clinical benefit. Genetic engineering of the cells to be transplanted (hematopoietic stem cell) may endow the brain myeloid progeny of these cells with enhanced or novel functions, contributing to therapeutic effects.
Key points
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Hematopoietic stem cells can generate upon transplantation a myeloid cell progeny in the brain that is endowed with the potential to release therapeutic molecules.
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Genetic engineering of the cells to be transplanted can instruct their progeny for alleviating neurometabolic and neurodegenerative disorders.
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A deep understanding of microglia origin and maintenance during adulthood will allow more extensive exploiting of these events.

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