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Adult stem cell findings offer new hope for Parkinson's cure
Research released today provides evidence that a cure for Parkinson's 
disease could lie just inside the nose of patients themselves.
The Griffith University study published today (Thursday 9am US East Coast) 
in the journal Stem Cells found that adult stem cells harvested from the 
noses of Parkinson's patients gave rise to dopamine-producing brain cells 
when transplanted into the brain of a rat.
The debilitating symptoms of Parkinson's such as loss of muscle control are 
caused by degeneration of cells that produce the essential chemical dopamine 
in the brain.
Current drug therapies replace dopamine in the brain, but these often become 
less effective after prolonged use.
The discovery is the work of the National Centre for Adult Stem Cell 
Research, part of Griffith's Eskitis Institute for Cell and Molecular 
Therapies.
Project leader Professor Alan Mackay-Sim said researchers simulated 
Parkinson's symptoms in rats by creating lesions on one side of the brain 
similar to the damage Parkinson's causes in the human brain.
"The lesions to one side of the brain made the rats run in circles," he 
said.
"When stem cells from the nose of Parkinson's patients were cultured and 
injected into the damaged area the rats re-aquired the ability to run in a 
straight line.
"All animals transplanted with the human cells had a dramatic reduction in 
the rate of rotation within just 3 weeks," he said.
"This provided evidence the cells had differentiated to give rise to 
dopamine-producing neurons influenced by being in the environment of the 
brain. In-vitro tests also revealed the presence of dopamine."
"Significantly, none of the transplants led to formation of tumours or 
teratomas in the host rats as has occurred after embryonic stem cell 
transplantation in a similar model.
He said like all stem cells, stem cells from the olfactory nerve in the nose 
are 'naïve' having not yet differentiated into which sort of cells they will 
give rise to.
"They can still be influenced by the environment they are put into. In this 
case we transplanted them into the brain, where they were directed to give 
rise to dopamine producing brain cells."
The advantage of using a patient's own cells is that, unlike stem cells from 
a foreign embryo, they are not rejected by the patient's immune system, so 
patients are free from a lifetime of potentially dangerous 
immuno-suppressant drug therapy.
This development follows Professor Mackay-Sim's 2006 development of a 
world-first technique that demonstrated that olfactory adult stem cells can 
give rise to heart, nerve, liver and brain cells.
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Co-authors on the paper were Wayne Murrell, Andrew Wetzig, Michael 
Donnellan, François Féron, Tom Burne, Adrian Meedeniya, James Kesby, John 
Bianco, Chris Perry, Peter Silburn.
The study was funded by the Australian National Health and Medical Research 
Council and the Australian Department of Health and Ageing.
Download the full article here at http://stemcells.alphamedpress

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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