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Repairing damage: Neural stem cells, tagged green with a fluorescent dye, have been transplanted among the brain cells (red) of a mouse born with brain damage after its mother was given heroin during pregnancy. Transplants like this one seemed to effectively reverse the cellular, biochemical, and behavioral defects suffered by heroin-damaged mice.
Joseph Yanai
Transplanted stem cells restore normal behavior in brain-damaged rodents.
By injecting stem cells directly into the brain, scientists have successfully reversed neural birth defects in mice whose mothers were given heroin during pregnancy. Even though most of the transplanted cells did not survive, they induced the brain's own cells to carry out extensive repairs.
Transplanted stem cells have previously shown promise in reversing brain damage caused by strokes, as well as by neurological diseases like Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and Huntington's. But their use in treating birth defects is relatively new. In recent years, a handful of research teams have been developing stem-cell-based therapies for rodents with real or simulated birth defects in the brain.
Joseph Yanai, director of the Ross Laboratory for Studies in Neural Birth Defects at the Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, in Jerusalem, says that stem-cell therapies are ideal for treating birth defects where the mechanism of damage is multifaceted and poorly understood. "If you use neural stem cells," says Yanai, "they are your little doctors. They're looking for the defect, they're diagnosing it, and they're differentiating into what's needed to repair the defect. They are doing my job, in a way."
Yanai and his colleagues began with mice that had been exposed to heroin in the womb. These mice suffer from learning deficits; when placed in a tank of murky water, for instance, they take longer than normal mice to find their way back to a submerged platform. And in their hippocampus--an area of the brain associated with memory and navigation--critical biochemical pathways are disrupted, and fewer new cells are produced.
All of those problems are swiftly resolved when the researchers inject neural stem cells derived from embryonic mice into the brains of the heroin-exposed animals. When swimming, the treated mice caught up with their normal counterparts, and their cellular and biochemical deficits disappeared. Yanai announced these findings in 2007 and 2008.
Such dramatic results were surprising, considering that just a fraction of a percent of the transplanted stem cells survived inside the mice's brains. But they are consistent with an emerging consensus of how adult stem cells perform their many functions through so-called bystander or chaperone effects. Beyond simply generating replacements for damaged cells, stem cells seem to produce signals that spur other cells to carry out normal organ maintenance and initiate damage control.
"The chaperone effect is an important aspect of stem-cell biology that's simply been under-recognized," says Evan Snyder, who directs the Stem Cell Research Center at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research, in California, and whose research group coined the term in 2002. "That actually may be the low-hanging fruit in the stem-cell field--taking advantage of this, and not the cell-replacement aspect that we always thought would be the key to stem-cell biology in regenerative medicine."
Cesar Borlongan, a professor and vice chairman for research in the department of neurosurgery at the University of South Florida College of Medicine, uses a different model to explore the use of stem-cell treatment for brain-damaged infants. By deliberately restricting blood and oxygen flow to the brains of newborn rats, he and his colleagues simulate the effects of an infant stroke--a devastating event that causes untreatable brain injury in newborn humans.
is there any way this can help treat my daughteres cerebral palsy?
Because cerebral palsy is often linked with hypoxic-ischemic brain injury, Dr. Borlongan's research in particular is definitely relevant. But it's important to understand that while these therapies have shown promise in animal models, they haven't yet undergone clinical testing in humans. Here's a link you might find informative: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/01/080129160714.htm
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10 Comments
Brain Damage in Infants
The article states toward the end that injecting stems cells involves "foreign" bodies. Would it not be feasible, if such a birthing injury is suspected, to harvest the baby's own stem cells from the umbilical cord and inject those back into the baby? Seems to me that this is almost a "why not do it all the time?" question.
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jocelynrice
4 Comments
Re: Brain Damage in Infants
Great question -- I know that one source of the stem cells used in Borlongan's experiments is indeed the umbilical cord, but I'm not sure about using an infant's own umbilical cells for treatment. I'll see if I can find an answer for you.
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jocelynrice
4 Comments
Re: Brain Damage in Infants
A response from Joseph Yanai: "Umbilical cord-derived stem cells are definitely a valuable source of stem cells for therapy and are being studied extensively in their own right. However, their usefulness is limited to those individuals who had their own umbilical cord stem cells harvested and stored. They obviously, can never be reharvested. In addition, there are many reports indicating difficulties in causing them to differentiate to all types of pluripotent stem cells needed for various therapies. So umbilical stem cells can be useful for several aspects of stem cell therapy but other avenue should be developed which have more general and more feasible applicability."
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