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Murray,
Very interesting.  Many women would feel that this research is only logical since they have always believed we think and react through our genitals anyhow.

Greg
48/35/35
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Murray Charters" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, November 08, 2000 11:53 PM
Subject: News: Sertoli cell transplants


> Testicles and transplants
> Cells from the testes could help the brains of stroke patients recover
> 
> Transplanting cells from the testes to the brain might one day help
> patients recover from stroke, say researchers in the US.
> 
> Sertoli cells isolated from the testes release growth factors that could
> protect certain types of neurons in the hours following a stroke,
> reports Cesar Borlongan from the National Institute on Drug Abuse
> in Baltimore.
> 
> The growth factors seem to specifically prevent dopamine-producing
> neurons from dying, says Borlongan. Last year his group showed that
>  Sertoli cells could protect dopamine-producing cells in animals with
>  Parkinson's disease.
> 
> Now they believe that Sertoli cell transplants could one day help the
> five per cent of stroke patients whose damage is limited to the basal
> ganglia, a region rich in dopamine cells.
> 
> Sertoli cells are also ignored by the immune system in the same way
> that sperm are not attacked. This means these cells should be a safe
> and effective way to limit the damage in these patients, Borlongan says.
> Because patients can tolerate a transplant of other people's Sertoli cells,
> women could receive transplants too.
> 
> Chain reaction
> 
> During a stroke, the loss of the blood supply rapidly kills a core group of cells.
> But in the hours afterwards, the damage becomes worse as dead cells in the
> core trigger neighbouring cells to commit suicide.
> 
> Borlongan mimicked the conditions of a stroke using rat cells in a culture dish
> Experiments showed that Sertoli cells protected dopamine-producing cells,
> reducing the number of neurons that committed suicide.
> 
> Borlongan's colleague Paul Sandberg from the University of South Florida
> College of Medicine in Tampa has now just completed the first tests in rats.
> By injecting Sertoli cells into the penumbra region of rat brains within a day
> of a stroke, the rats suffered less severe motor deficits. This suggests that
> many of the vulnerable cells were saved.
> 
> Borlongan knocked out various growth factors produced by Sertoli cells and
> found that the most likely protective substance is a peptide called glial-derived
> neurotrophic factor, or GDNF.
> 
> The advantage of using Sertoli cells to deliver GDNF is that they can keep up
> production for long periods of time.
> 
> Correspondence about this story should be directed to
> [log in to unmask]
> 
> 1157 GMT, 8 November 2000
> Helen Phillips, New Orleans
> 
> http://www.newscientist.com/dailynews/news.jsp?id=ns9999146
> http://www.newscientist.com/dailynews/news.jsp?id=ns9999146
>