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thanks, Maryse, interesting!

-----Original Message----- 
From: mschild
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2012 11:58 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Optogenetics assists in fight against Parkinson's diseas

31 Oct 2012
*/Lund University will use the technique to study the behavior of
transplanted cells in laboratory rats./*

A research project underway at Lund University
<http://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/> and funded by the Michael J. Fox
Foundation <https://www.michaeljfox.org/> will use optogenetics to
monitor the effectiveness of transplanted cells in combating the effects
of Parkinson's disease, the latest step in the use of the technique to
study this condition.

The team led by Merab Kokaia proposes to take human skin cells and
modify them to act as nerve cells, a "reprogramming" step known as
transdifferentiation and which involves introducing new foreign genes
into the cell.

Each cell will also be equipped with genes for a light-sensitive
protein, which allows them to react when irradiated with light, in this
case blue light from a laser or LED supplied via optical fiber. This
responsiveness, and the ability to target it onto specific cells of
interest, is the basis of optogenetics.

Once prepared, the cells will be transplanted into the brains of
laboratory rats modeling Parkinson's disease.

"This is the first time such an approach is going to be used," said
Kokaia. "If we get signals from the host brain as a response to light,
we know that they come from the transplanted cells since they are the
only ones to carry the light-sensitive protein. This gives us a much
more specific way of studying the brain's reactions compared to
inserting an electrode, which is the current method. With an electrode,
we do not know whether the electric signals that are detected come from
'new' or 'old' brain cells."

*Dopamine release*
One particular goal is to investigate more fully the factors affecting
the release of dopamine, a chemical responsible for transmitting the
signals within the brain that allow for coordination of movement, and
one therefore of keen interest to researchers hoping to understand
Parkinson's disease.

"The principle is that optogenetic stimulation or activation of the
cells would increase release of dopamine from these cells," Kokaia
commented to Optics.org. "Dopamine is the main neurotransmitter that is
in short supply in Parkinson's disease, since the cells producing
dopamine die. Our idea is to transform cells derived from human skin
into neurons that can produce dopamine, and then use optogenetics to try
to increase dopamine release from these transplanted cells."

Although this ambition might still be some way off, Kokaia believes that
the approach is a sound one as a route to tackle the disease. "We know
that this is long term research, but the methodology is interesting and
it will be exciting to see what we can come up with," he said.

The Michael J. Fox Foundation agrees, and has provided a grant of
$75,000 to the project. Established by actor Michael J. Fox in 2000, the
Foundation has invested over $300 million towards combating Parkinson's
disease, and is said to be the largest private funder of research into
the condition in the world.

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