http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=19900
Medical News Today
11 Feb 2005![]()
A compound may improve the chances that stem
cells transplanted from a patient's bone marrow will help take over brain
functions -
A compound similar to the components of DNA
may improve the chances that stem cells transplanted from a patient's bone
marrow to the brain will take over the functions of damaged cells and help treat
Alzheimer's disease and other neurological illnesses.
A research team led by University of Central
Florida professor Kiminobu Sugaya found that treating bone marrow cells in
laboratory cultures with bromodeoxyuridine, a compound that becomes part of DNA,
made adult human stem cells more likely to develop as brain cells after they
were implanted in adult rat brains. The findings will be included in the next
issue of the Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience journal, which is scheduled
to be published in late February.
Sugaya and his colleagues at UCF's Burnett
College of Biomedical Sciences hope to eventually show that stem cells
transplanted from a patient's blood or bone marrow will be an effective
treatment for Alzheimer's and other neurological diseases because they can
replace cells that die from those ailments. The researchers are working with a
$1.4 million grant from the National Institutes of Health.
"By using a patient's own stem cells instead of
embryonic stem cells, we're able to avoid the ethical concerns many people have
about stem cell research," Sugaya said. "We also don't have to worry about the
immune system rejecting the new cells."
Stem cells hold promise for the treatment of many
diseases because they are capable of dividing endlessly and developing into many
different types of cells in the human body. The researchers at UCF and the
University of Illinois at Chicago, where Sugaya taught before moving to UCF last
summer, are the first to demonstrate improved memory in adult animals after
transplanting neural stem cells into their brains.
Sugaya and his colleagues used bromodeoxyuridine
to improve the chances that the stem cells taken from adults' bone marrow would
have the potential to develop more efficiently into neural cells.
In the same experiments, they reported successes
in taking stem cells from bone marrow and getting them to become retinal cells
after they were implanted in rats. Improving the chances of implanted cells
functioning as retinal cells is an encouraging sign for the treatment of
glaucoma and other diseases that cause patients to lose their vision.
Sugaya hopes further studies at UCF will lead to
researchers gaining more control over ensuring that cells develop properly as
brain cells once implanted in brains and as retinal cells when implanted in
eyes. His research group also is testing the ability of stem cells taken from
adults' bone marrow to become other types of cells, such as heart muscle cells,
after they have been treated with bromodeoxyuridine. Many more tests using cell
cultures and animals need to be conducted before any trials on humans can be
done.
Sugaya's colleagues include Jose Pulido, formerly
a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago's School of Ophthalmology
and Visual Sciences, and Sugaya's wife, Ikuko, a research associate in his UCF
lab.
Technologies from
the research project are licensed to NewNeural LLC, a company funded by Sugaya
and two other founders. NewNeural works to develop and commercialize products
that improve the brain's ability to repair and replace damaged brain cells.
Chad Binette - cbinette@mail.ucf.edu
University of Central Florida