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The source of this article is the New Zealand Herald: http://tinyurl.com/cxl9q

Breakthrough key to rebuilding brains

15.06.05

By Steve Connor


Scientists have grown fully mature brain cells in a laboratory for the
first time, using a technique that mimics the natural process of brain
regeneration.

It promises to open the door to new ways of treating and possibly curing
debilitating brain diseases such as Parkinson's, epilepsy and Alzheimer's.

The scientists said they were able to produce virtually unlimited
quantities of brain cells, which could revolutionise transplant medicine as
well as lead to new drugs to stimulate the regrowth of damaged nerves.

Bjorn Scheffler, a neuroscientist at Florida University who made the
breakthrough, said the procedure involved mimicking the natural process
through which key stem cells in the brain orchestrate partial regeneration
of the brain.

"Our study shows for the first time the entire process that goes on in our
brain for life. We can, in a dish, recapture the process in front of our
eyes."

It was not the first time that scientists had shown stem cells could be
manipulated in the lab to produce mature brain cells, Dr Scheffler added.

"But nobody has been capable of replicating the process from the very first
step to the very last step - it's unique to get the whole process happening
before your eyes."

The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, was done with mice but the scientists believe it is only a matter
of time before they are able to reproduce the process with human brain cells.

Dr Scheffler said the findings effectively showed it was possible to
construct an assembly line for manufacturing unlimited quantities of human
brain cells, or neurons.

"We can basically take these cells and freeze them until we need them. Then
we thaw them, begin a cell-generating process and produce a ton of new
neurons."

Professor Dennis Steindler, who led the Florida research team, said the
strength of the technique lay in its ability to identify vital stem cells
that have the power to grow into adult brain cells.

"We've isolated for the first time what appears to be the true candidate
stem cell," Professor Steindler said.

Time-lapse images taken by the scientists show how simple, immature stem
cells gradually develop and grow into the fully functioning cell - vital to
the healthy functioning of the brain.

"Now we can make a lot of brain cells from just a very small number of
these stem cells, which is great because we'd have to do that to repair
neurological disease," Professor Steindler said.

Another possibility is to use the technique as a model of natural brain
repair so scientists can test potential drugs for stimulating the regrowth
of damaged nerves.

"We are already beginning the process of screening for compounds that will
allow this to happen perhaps without sticking anything into our brains,"
Professor Steindler said.

"It's been the goal of this field of stem cell biology and regenerative
medicine to get us closer to being able to pop a pill in your mouth when
you have a neurological disorder that has a specific action on your own
indigenous stem cell population.

"The home run is that we will find drugs to mobilise our own population [of
brain stem cells], which is what this study is focusing on.

"I'm quite optimistic we will translate this to human therapeutics in the
very near future," he added.

"Because advances in the field of regenerative medicine are occurring so
quickly, it could be any time.

"It could be next week, it could be 10 years. I'd like it to be next week."

Q&A

Q: Why is this a breakthrough?
A: Scientists think they have found the stem cell which grows into a mature
brain cell. Once they can identify this cell, they can manipulate it to
grow almost unlimited quantities of brain cells.

Q: What could it be used for?
A: Transplant surgery to replace a damaged heart or brain. Or a new drug
could copy the technique to repair damaged cells.

- INDEPENDENT

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