June 21, 2006
Mouse Stem Cells Treat Paralysis in Rats
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and SUNY Upstate Medical
University in Syracuse, N.Y., have developed a multistep regimen that they say
improves the functional effect of transplanted stem cells in paralyzed rats.
The study suggests that similar techniques may be useful for treating spinal
cord injury, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and spinal muscular atrophy (SMA).
The research team, led by MDA grantee Douglas Kerr at Hopkins and including
Jeffrey Rothstein, who has MDA research funding and directs the MDA/ALS Center
at the same institution, say their strategy restored functional nerve-to muscle
connections and movement in the back legs of rats that had been paralyzed by a
virus.
In a four-step process, the investigators transplanted mouse embryonic stem
cells and injected the nerve growth factor GDNF into the sciatic nerve near the
spinal cord. At the same time, they infused two compounds that counteract the
effects of myelin, a normal substance that ensheaths nerve fibers but which has
been found to interfere with the growth of new fibers.
“We conclude that restoration of functional motor units [a nerve cell with
fibers connecting to muscle fibers] by embryonic stem cells is possible and
represents a potential therapeutic strategy for patients with paralysis,” the
authors write in the June 26 online version of Annals of Neurology. |