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Human Stem Cells Become Nerve Cells in Study
Sun Jan 30, 2005 07:07 PM ET
Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Stem cells taken from human embryos were coaxed
into becoming motor neurons in an experiment that might one day help
scientists repair damaged nervous systems, researchers reported Sunday.
The study supports claims by stem cell researchers that they can train
embryonic stem cells to develop on demand into any type of tissue in the
body.

They hope this technology will eventually transform medicine and allow
cures for a range of diseases -- in this case, nervous system injuries
and diseases such as Lou Gehrig's disease.

The team at the University of Wisconsin used stem cells that are approved
for research by the federal government. Their experiment was funded by
the National Institutes of Health and the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Association, which is seeking a cure for the untreatable and paralyzing
condition also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.

Su-Chun Zhang and colleagues said their trial-and-error study helped them
learn how motor neuron cells, which are key to the nervous system,
develop in the first place.

Motor neurons transmit messages from the brain and spinal cord and help
control almost every movement in the body.

Patients with motor neuron diseases or spinal cord injuries lose control
of these movements.

The hope is to repair or replace these damaged cells.

Writing in the journal Nature Biotechnology, Zhang and colleagues said
they delivered a carefully timed cocktail of proteins to their cells to
direct their development.

"You need to teach the (cells) to change step by step, where each step
has different conditions and a strict window of time," Zhang said in a
statement. "Otherwise, it just won't work."

And Zhang said the experiment showed that human stem cells do not
necessarily differentiate in the way that other animal stem cells do.

"We cannot simply translate studies from animal to humans," Zhang said.

The administration of President Bush does not support the use of human
embryonic stem cells except in limited circumstances using cells already
in existence as of 2001. Federal funds may not be used to take new stem
cells from human embryos, which are destroyed in the process.

Opponents of human embryonic research say this is tantamount to murder,
while supporters say embryos from fertility clinics are slated for
destruction anyway and point to the potential benefits from research.

http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticle.jhtml?type=scienceNews&storyID=74764
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