发新话题
打印

[研究进展] Human stem cells used to cure brain disorder

Human stem cells used to cure brain disorder

Human stem cells used to cure brain disorder
Success in mice could be a breakthrough for disorders such as multiple sclerosis.

Katharine Sanderson


Human donor cells (red) spread through the mouse brains and trigger their repair.Windrem et al./Cell Stem Cell 5 June 2008Human stem cells have been used to correct abnormal brain development in mice with fatal brain disorders, offering hope for treating a range of neurological disorders including some deadly childhood genetic diseases.

Those behind the new treatment hope that human clinical trials could be just a few years away.

The treatment uses human glial progenitor cells — cells that can differentiate into the glial cells that, among other things, make up myelin. Myelin, a protein that insulates the long 'arms' of nerve cells, called axons, helps the conduction of neural signals throughout the nervous system.

A team led by Steven Goldman, at the University of Rochester in New York, took the progenitor cells from white matter in the fetal human brain and injected them into the spinal cords of mutant shiverer mice shortly after their birth.

The mice, which shiver and shake as their name suggests, have severe neurological defects caused by a genetic mutation that stops them producing myelin. Without myelin, neural signals get stuck, causing potentially fatal disease.

“There’s no way we’d be able to conduct a [neural] signal very far if it weren’t for myelin,” Goldman explains. As they develop, shiverer mice become unable to walk forwards, have increasing numbers of seizures, and typically die at just 18–21 weeks of age.

Debilitating diseases
In humans, myelin losses also cause serious diseases. Multiple sclerosis is characterised by myelin loss in some areas of the brain. Some rare childhood diseases are also caused by an inability to produce myelin. One such example is adrenoleukodystrophy, a disease whose profile was raised by the film Lorenzo’s Oil, which tells the story Lorenzo Odone and his family’s battle to find a cure for his condition. Odone died last week, aged 30. “These are awful, awful diseases,” says Goldman.

Goldman has spent four years perfecting a technique to implant human glial progenitor cells into the nervous system of mice. In the experiment, published in the journal Cell Stem Cell 1, Goldman used five injection sites to allow the human stem cells to penetrate the entire nervous system of the baby mice.

“This is a therapy for the future.”
Ian Duncan
University of Wisconsin-Madison
The researchers knew that if the mouse immune system was suppressed, preventing rejection, the mice would have a better chance of survival. So Goldman used mice that were a cross between shiverer mice and mice genetically modified to have their immune system suppressed.

The team treated 26 of these mice with 300,000 human glial progenitor cells each, 29 with a set of control injections, and left 59 untreated. All the mice deteriorated in health in the first 130 days, as is usual for shiverer mice, and by 150 days all of the control and untreated mice had died. But six of the stem-cell-treated mice survived for longer than 130 days, and four of those went on to live for 14 months, at which time they were sacrificed for analysis.

Transformation
The mice that improved showed impressive myelin growth at sites where the new cells had been implanted. “Myelination was much more than anything we’d seen,” says Goldman. The new myelin was also structurally normal.

The mice did better than just survive — as the myelin grew, the mice began to lose signs of being shiverers. They gained normal brain activity, no longer had seizures and lost much of the shakiness. “As they live longer, they slowly but surely get better,” says Goldman. He thinks that if he can get the mice through the sick stage of their early life, perhaps by giving them anti-convulsants to stop the seizures that cause so much damage, he can improve his rescue rate.

ADVERTISEMENT

The breakthrough is “stunning”, says Ian Duncan, who studies myelin at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The work will have greatest relevance in treating congenital childhood diseases, he says, although he warns that a practical therapy is still some way away. ”This is a therapy for the future,” he says.

“This is a good proof of principle,” says Goldman. He is optimistic that once his methods meet with the approval of the US Food and Drug Administration, clinical trials in humans may only be a few years away. There is nothing in the biology that needs to be clarified, he says: “The questions become practical.”

References
Windrem, M. S. et al. Cell Stem Cell 2, 553-565 (2008).

TOP

自然:人体神经胶质祖细胞可医治老鼠脑病

美国科学家最近尝试用人体神经胶质祖细胞医治患致命大脑疾病的老鼠,取得一定效果。科学家希望今后几年内能把这种新疗法用于人体临床试验,医治包括先天性遗传疾病在内的多种神经疾病。

据《自然》杂志网站日前报道,美国罗切斯特大学的一个研究小组首先培育出一批神经系统发生基因突变的小鼠,这些小鼠出生后就颤抖不停。然后科学家从人类胎儿大脑中提取神经胶质祖细胞,并把这些细胞注入小鼠的脊髓。

神经胶质祖细胞可分化为组成髓磷脂的神经胶质细胞,髓磷脂是一种重要的蛋白质,能帮助神经系统传导信号。

科学家们为26只患病幼鼠注射了神经胶质祖细胞,每只注射量为30万个细胞;对另外59只幼鼠则不进行任何治疗。在实验开始150天后,没有接受治疗的所有幼鼠全部死亡,但接受治疗的幼鼠中有6只存活下来,其中有4只寿命超过14个月。

研究小组负责人史蒂文·戈德曼说,研究人员过去4年间不断完善这种特殊的治疗技术,目前可以在5个不同身体部位向小鼠注射神经胶质祖细胞,以保证这些细胞能够渗透到小鼠的整个神经系统。

TOP

发新话题