Print

Print


The study sheds light on the long term consequences of brain tissue 
transplants and may help improve future trials that consist of transplanting 
cells from other sources, such as bioengineered cells or stem cells. 
Pioneering surgeries performed with aborted fetal tissue in the 1980’s in 
patients with Parkinson’s proved that the diseased brain could be repaired, at 
least in some cases. The treatment aimed to replace decayed dopamine cells in 
the brain’s of Parkinson’s patients. Some transplanted patients showed 
remarkable improvement but eventually the majority developed dyskinesias.

The controversy surrounding the transplantation of fetal cells into adults put 
an end to human trials in the United States in the late 1980’s when the U.S. 
government temporarily banned fetal tissue research, though research continued 
in other parts of the world. The U.S. ban was lifted in the early 1990’s, but 
the cause of dyskinesias in these patients remained a mystery, and no effective 
treatment has been found.

Now, Marios Politis and colleagues in the United Kingdom and Sweden have 
discovered that the neurotransmitter serotonin is the culprit. Using imaging 
scans and radioactive tracers, the researchers were able to visualize the 
function of different chemicals in the two patient’s brains. Taking a closer 
look, they found that previously decayed dopamine neurons—a hallmark of 
Parkinson’s disease—were still restored and fully functional over a decade 
after transplantation. But Politis and colleagues also saw unexpectedly high 
amounts of serotonin neurons in the transplanted tissue.

The finding is puzzling because the usual dyskinesias in Parkinson’s are 
thought to be a result of dopamine action, not serotonin. The researchers 
discovered that the deceptive ability of serotonin neurons to switch to a 
different neurotransmitter—to adopt and pump out dopamine—causes the 
dyskinesias. Administering a drug to block this action almost immediately 
eliminated the dyskinesias in both patients. The authors also suggest that 
removing serotonin in any future cell-based therapies might prevent this 
crippling side effect. Recently, a new trial launched under the name TRANSEURO 
plans to use fetal cell therapy to treat Parkinson's disease, with the first 
surgeries planned in 2012.

More information: "Serotonergic Neurons Mediate Dyskinesia Side Effects in 
Parkinson’s Patients with Neural Transplants," by M. Politis et al. Science 
Translational Medicine.

Provided by AAAS

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn