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Human Stem Cell Transplant Helps Brain-Impaired Mice
WEDNESDAY, June 4 (HealthDay News) -- Mice with a congenital brain disorder 
improved after receiving human neural stem cell transplants, a U.S. study 
finds.
The mice lacked myelin, a substance that plays a critical role in the 
transmission of electrical signals between nerve cells. When myelin is 
missing or damaged, electrical signals aren't properly transmitted. These 
"shiverer" mice typically die within months of birth.
Demyelination also occurs in people with multiple sclerosis.
Previous research has examined the use of cell transplantation for restoring 
absent or lost myelin to diseased nerve fibers. But, until now, no 
transplantation of human neural stem cells or of their derivatives (glial 
progenitor cells) had been successful in test animals.
In this new study, researchers from the University of Rochester Medical 
Center and a number of other universities (Cornell, UCLA and Baylor) created 
a new method for harvesting and purification of human fetal glial progenitor 
cells.
They also developed a new cell delivery strategy that uses multiple 
injection sites to encourage widespread and dense take-up of the 
transplanted cells through the central nervous system.
When the researchers used these new approaches, the transplanted cells took 
hold throughout the brain and spinal cord, and the mice showed robust, 
efficient and functional myelination. Some of the mice showed neurological 
improvement and a fraction of them were save by the procedure.
"The neurological recovery and survival of the mice receiving transplants 
was in sharp contrast to the fate of their untreated controls, which 
uniformly died by five months," researcher Dr. Steve Goldman, of the 
departments of neurology and neurosurgery at the University of Rochester 
Medical Center, said in a prepared statement.
"To our knowledge, these data represent the first outright rescue of a 
congenital hypomyelinating disorder by means of stem or progenitor cell 
transplantation," Goldman said. "Although much work needs to be done to 
maximize the number of individuals that respond to transplantation, I think 
that these findings hold great promise for the potential of stem cell-based 
treatment in a wide range of hereditary and ischemic myelin disorders in 
both children and adults."
The study was published in the June issue ofCell Stem Cell.
More information
The Multiple Sclerosis International Federation has more about 
demyelination.
SOURCE: Cell Press, news release, June 4, 2008

 Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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