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From : The Australian
 BREAKING NEWS

This story is from our news.com.au network Source: Reuters

Stem cells 'heal spinal injuries'
From correspondents in Washington
July 27, 2005
GENETICALLY engineered stem cells can help rats' severed spinal cords
grow back together, according to a study published today.

Rats given the treatment, using stem cells taken from rat embryos, could
move their legs again after their spines were severed in the lab, said
the researchers' report in the Journal of Neuroscience.

The scientists hope the approach, which generated a new fatty cover for
the spinal cord cells called the myelin sheath, also could be shown to
work in people.

The key is using the right stem cells and then stimulating them
correctly, said the researchers, who were led by Scott Whittemore of the
University of Louisville School of Medicine in Kentucky.

"These findings suggest the possibility that transplantation therapy
using a subset of neural stem cells and neurotrophic factors might
improve functional recovery in human spinal cord injury," said Dr Michael
Selzer, a professor of neurology at the University of Pennsylvania
Medical Centre in Philadelphia.

 Spinal cord injuries can be caused by accidents or infections and affect
250,000 people a year in the United States alone, costing $US4 billion
($5.25 billion) annually, according to the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders.

Whittemore's team took specific cells from rat embryos called glial
restricted precursor cells – a kind of stem cell or master cell that
gives rise to nerve cells.

They genetically engineered these cells to do a little extra work by
producing a compound called a growth factor – in this case, a new one
called multineurotrophin. It was designed to coax immature neural stem
cells to mature and become specialised cells called oligodendrocytes.

Oligodendrocytes help myelin grow onto nerve fibres, which cannot grow or
function without this fatty protective coating.

Two-thirds of the rats in the study regained some hind limb movement, the
researchers said.


 http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,16064156%2
55E1702,00.html

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