Start pageMail usSite map


About CMBT
News and Forum
Stem Cells therapy
Registration
Scientific database
Contacts

To main page

Download presentstion
Learn about the power
of Stem cells technology
Lernet Advanced Technology

Created - Lernet

16 ноября 2006

Stem cells treat wasted muscles

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Golden retriever dogs make
a good animal model
for muscular dystrophy
An infusion of stem cells scraped from blood vessels has helped dogs with a form of muscular dystrophy to walk more normally, perhaps heralding a treatment for the human disease.
Muscular dystrophies are a group of widespread genetic disorders in which the muscles gradually break down. The most common form, called Duchenne muscular dystrophy, is caused by mutations in a gene called dystrophin and inevitably causes paralysis and death.
Giulio Cossu of the San Raffaele Scientific Institute in Milan, Italy, and his colleagues had previously shown that a type of stem cell called a mesoangioblast, which lives in the walls of blood vessels and can generate muscle cells, can help mice with a form of muscular dystrophy1. So they set out to study the effect of the cells in an animal model that more closely mimics the human condition: golden retriever dogs with a mutation in their dystrophin gene.
The team extracted the blood-vessel stem cells from normal dogs, grew them to large numbers in the lab, and injected tens of millions of cells into sick dogs in five monthly injections.
Afflicted dogs usually develop troubles walking by 8 months old. But many of the treated dogs did much better; one was still walking well at 13 months of age. The results are published online in Nature2.
Cossu says that the team has already identified the equivalent stem cells from humans and that clinical trials could start in a few patients by late 2007. But they will need to test more dogs first. "We're not rushing," Cossu says.
It's uncertain whether this type of treatment can repair heart muscle or the diaphragm, which also fail during muscular dystrophy. Furthermore, it is unclear whether the stem cells might lodge themselves elsewhere in the body and cause unwanted side effects.

Straight to source

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Stem cells can travel through
the blood, squirming their way
out into muscles throughout the body.
 
By examining the dogs' muscles, the team found that the stem cells had travelled through the blood, squirmed their way out of capillaries and into many muscles throughout the body. There, they had fused with existing muscle fibres, manufactured the missing dystrophin protein and rejuvenated the fibres.
Researchers have been testing other types of stem cell to treat muscular dystrophy, such as ones extracted directly from muscle or bone marrow. But these cell types have either revived only a few muscle fibres or needed to be injected directly into each muscle.
The real advantage of the mesoangioblast cells is that they can be injected into the bloodstream and swim to most muscles in the body, says neurologist Thomas Rando who studies muscular dystrophy at Stanford University, California.
Stem cells have been touted as the way to regenerate numerous failing tissues — but none have yet become tried-and-tested human treatments. Rando says that muscular dystrophy is a good disease to target, because the replacement cells only have to fuse with existing muscle fibres, rather than spawning brand new cells or tissues.

Tailor-made

In terms of treating human disease, cells donated from another person are not ideal because a patient has to take lifelong immunosuppressant drugs to avoid rejection.
Cossu's team looked at one possible solution to this problem: they extracted stem cells from sick dogs and used gene therapy to insert a working copy of the dystrophin gene into these cells. They then injected the dogs with their own, 'fixed' cells.
Dogs treated this way began to manufacture dystrophin, but they did not have improved symptoms. Cossu thinks the results might be improved by using a different version of the dystrophin gene (which is notoriously difficult to handle because it is so large - in humans it is more than 2.5 million base pairs long, and by far the largest gene in the human genome).
 
References
 
Sampaolesi M., et al. Science, 301. 487 - 492 (2003). | Article | PubMed | ISI | ChemPort |
Sampaolesi M., et al. Nature, published online doi:10/1038/nature05282 (2006).

Enter
(open in new window)

News arhive

2007 year
october
september
august
july
june
may
april
march
february
january
2006 year
december
november
october
september
july
june
may
april
march
february
Our contacts
Russia, 107045 Moscow, Lukov side str. 10
© CopyRight CMBT 2005