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Janet,
Interesting news.  What will they discover next?  I am to the point that I'm
willing to try anything even if it causes me to break out in song in the
spring.

This would also confirm many people's opinion of me as a proverbial "bird
brain".
:)
Greg
47/35/35

----- Original Message -----
From: "janet marie paterson" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2000 9:46 AM
Subject: NEWS: BBC: Bird brains offer stem cells hope


> Bird brains offer stem cells hope
>
> Thursday, 24 February, 2000, 13:00 GMT - A new development concerning stem
cells is keeping them at the forefront of biomedical research. Stem cells,
it is believed, have the ability to develop into any other type of cell.
>
> Some scientists say that controlling them will herald a revolution in
medicine and a new way to treat disease because it would open the way to
cell replacement.
>
> In an intriguing example of this ongoing research scientists have used
bird brains. They have coaxed new brain cells to grow from elusive adult
stem cells. There are important implications for repairing human brains
damaged by Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease.
>
> By destroying certain brain cells in zebra finches the scientists say they
have prompted the growth of new brain cells. Describing their research in
the journal Neuron, they say they believe that neural stem cells must be the
source of the new neurons.
>
> "This is, we believe, the first example where it has been demonstrated
that one can induce the birth of new brain cells and that they actually
contribute to a complex behaviour," said Jeffrey Macklis, a neuroscientist
at Harvard University.
>
> "It is a step toward attempting the same in mammals" he added.
>
> The researchers chose zebra finches because of an interesting variation in
bird biology.
>
> Canaries stop singing every autumn when a population of brain cells
responsible for song-generation die. Over the winter, a whole new population
of neurons grows back and in the spring the canaries learn their songs all
over again.
>
> But zebra finches lack this seasonal cycle. Instead, their brains generate
a continuous trickle of new neurons.
>
> Until recently scientists believed that brain cells did not regenerate but
they now know that new cells do grow to a limited degree, especially in
brain regions called the olfactory bulb and the hippocampus. One theory
receiving serious attention holds that when certain neurons die, they signal
stem cells to produce replacements.
>
> Macklis's team selectively killed one kind of song-related neuron in their
zebra finches. The birds, as predicted, partly lost their ability to sing.
But three months later they were singing as normal.
>
> When the researchers looked at their brains, they saw that the neurons had
grown back, in much the same way that canary neurons come back. They say
they are now performing more experiments to see just where the new cells
came from but they suspect they coaxed stem cells into action.
>
> Stem cells are cells that can develop into other types of cells and as
such they have the potential to be used to replace cells that have been lost
of damaged.
>
> The new-found ability to grow stem cells from human embryos in the
laboratory was hailed by Science magazine as one of the major breakthroughs
of recent years.
>
> Scientists are trying to find ways to use either adult or embryonic stem
cells, or both, to regenerate various forms of tissue, including brain cells
of patients with disease such as Alzheimer's or Parkinson's.
>
> They are however difficult to isolate and grow. Controversially they can
be taken from aborted foetuses or from embryos left over from IVF
(test-tube) fertilisation programmes. In many countries this is illegal.
>
> Some researchers say that there may be a solution to the ethical problems
of obtaining stem cells from embryos. Many tissues in the human body contain
stem cells. Usually they develop into more cells of the tissues they are in
but there is hope that they can be re-programmed.
>
> There is some recent evidence that they can be enticed to go back to an
unspecialised 'blank' state. This line of research has the promise to obtain
stem cells without using human embryos.
>
>
> By BBC News Online science editor Dr David Whitehouse
> BBC News Online: Sci/Tech
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/sci/tech/newsid_655000/655194.stm
>
> janet paterson
> 52 now / 41 dx / 37 onset
> a new voice: http://www.geocities.com/janet313/
> 613 256 8340 PO Box 171 Almonte Ontario Canada K0A 1A0
>