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Dead brains become source for new cells

WebPosted Mon Nov 6 15:04:26 2000
http://cbc.ca/cgi-bin/templates/view.cgi?/news/2000/11/06/stemcells001106

NEW ORLEANS - Scientists have discovered even cadavers can supply
the incredibly versatile brain stem cells once thought to be
available only from fetal tissue.

Brain stem cells are master cells that can turn into different kinds
of brain and nerve cells.

Dr. Fred H. Gage of the Salk Institute at LaJolla, Calif., worked on
the cadavers. His research used bits of tissue taken soon after
death from children and young adults who had died of various
neurological diseases.

His lab got the tissue 10 hours to three days after death. In every
case, as well as with cells from a man who died at 72, researcher
Theo Palmer was able to get some of the cells to divide and reproduce
themselves, and to grow into different kinds of nervous system
cells, Gage said.

Several other reports to the Society for Neuroscience are opening
the field of stem cell research, and helping researchers bypass the
ethical dilemmas involved with using human fetal tissues.

Another research team has shown skin can also supply brain stem
cells, and with a bit of tweaking, so can bones.

Ira Black of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey,
grew brain cells from cells taken from bone marrow, where they
ordinarily would have created bone, cartilage, muscle, tendon and
fat cells.

He previously reported he and his colleagues turned 80 per cent of
bone marrow cells taken from rats and humans into nerve cells.
Additional work has brought that up to more than 99 percent, Black
said.

But while Dr. Ronald D.G. McKay of the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke calls the finds 'exciting,' he
warns his findings are not yet solutions and may never be.

McKay and two colleagues warned there are big differences between
stem cells from embryos, and those from adult tissue. They also said
scientists don't yet know much about those differences.

Society for Neuroscience

http://www.sfn.org/


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