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This abstract provides so clearer description of using one's own cells.
This research is hopeful, and on a less contentious track than the
embryonic stem cells. At this rate I might be around to become a
great-grandmother. ;0)


Public release date: 24-Oct-2004

  Olfactory bulb stem cells and Lou Gehrig's disease Johns Hopkins
researchers have found that transplants of mouse stem cells taken from
the
adult brain's olfactory bulb can delay symptoms and death in a mouse
model
of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig's disease. They are

scheduled to present their findings Oct. 24 at the annual meeting of the
Society for Neuroscience in San Diego.

The olfactory bulb, the center of smell detection, houses numerous
primitive stem cells that normally feed the constant, life-long
regeneration of odor-detecting nerves. Because they are found in a fairly

accessible region of the brain and could conceivably be removed from a
person's olfactory bulb without causing permanent damage, adult olfactory

bulb stem cells are a potential non-embryonic source for cells that could

prove useful in replacing nerve cells lost due to injury or diseases like

ALS and Parkinson's.

Researchers Zhiping Liu, Ph.D., and Lee Martin, Ph.D., who have carefully

characterized cells from the olfactory bulb in people, rats and mice,
grew
clusters of neuronal stem cells taken from the olfactory bulb of normal
mice and froze them. Retrieved cells were then transplanted into the
spinal
cords of genetically engineered mice that develop the equivalent of ALS.

Animals that got the transplanted cells did develop disease symptoms, but

did so about a month and a half later than non-transplanted animals (137
days versus 90 days of age, on average). Treated mice also lived about
two
months longer than untreated mice, who were euthanized at roughly 137
days
because of their disease.

"These transplants significantly prolonged the animals' lives by becoming

neurons and probably also by influencing existing nerve cells," says
Martin, an associate professor of pathology and neuroscience at Johns
Hopkins. "The transplants definitely provided a functional improvement,
and
we're hopeful about the potential of these adult neuronal stem cells in
treating ALS some day. But there is a great deal of laboratory work to do

before clinical trials would be appropriate."

Jo Ann


It is a common delusion that you make things better by talking about
them.
  -- Dame Rose Macaulay

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