October
16, 2006
Human
Stem Cells Aid Rats With ALS
MDA grantee Vassilis Koliatsos at Johns
Hopkins University in Baltimore recently
coordinated a team of scientists who
transplanted human stem cells into the
spinal cords of rats with amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis (ALS) and
obtained significant benefit.
ALS is a progressive, paralyzing disease
of adulthood that usually leads to death
within three to five years of onset.
Some 10 percent of cases are inherited,
but the vast majority have no known
cause.
The findings, published in the Oct.
15 issue of the journal Transplantation,
may have implications for the future
of stem cell transplantation in ALS
and other disorders of the motor neurons,
the nerve cells in the brain and spinal
cord that control muscle movement.
The investigators grafted human fetal
spinal cord stem cells into the lumbar
(lower back) spinal cords of rats with
a genetic form of ALS and then measured
the cells’ ability to mature,
as well as their effects on motor neuron
numbers, motor performance, disease
onset and survival in the animals.
The rats received the immunosuppressive
drug FK506 (tacrolimus) to prevent rejection
of the cells.
The human cells showed extensive maturation
into neurons, which then made contact
with existing nerve cells. They also
produced two neurotrophic (nerve-nourishing)
proteins, glial cell-derived neurotrophic
factor (GDNF) and brain-derived neurotrophic
factor (BDNF), as mature neurons normally
do.
The grafts delayed the onset and progression
of the ALS-like disease and extended
the life span of the rats by more than
10 days, even though the cells were
inserted only into the lumbar area and
not into vital areas, such as those
that control breathing.
“The potency of this effect can
be best appreciated if one considers
the fact that, for a disseminated [widespread]
illness like ALS, lumbar cord grafting
is a partial approach that omits other
vital portions of the [cord], i.e. the
cervical motor neuron column responsible
for respiratory [muscle] movements,”
the authors write.
The scientists concluded that stem
cell grafts can survive well despite
being in an environment where cells
are degenerating (which has until now
been open to debate) and can exert “powerful
clinical effects.” They say at
least some of these effects may be related
to the secretion of neurotrophic factors,
which can probably travel over relatively
long distances, rather than to new neuron
formation or new cell-to-cell connections.
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