Stem cells have long been heralded as a potential treatment for a range
of brain ailments, but research has so far focused on movement disorders
such as Parkinson's disease. Now a new animal study shows that the
immature cells could also help with cognitive impairments. Frank M.
LaFerla <http://neurobiology.bio.uci.edu/faculty/laferla>   of the
University of California <http://www.uci.edu>  , Irvine, and his
colleagues showed that neural stem cells can reverse memory loss.



The team manipulated the genome of mice such that they could initiate
neuron death in the hippocampus by turning on specific genes. Mice whose
brains were injured with this method showed significant memory
impairment on place-recognition tests. After receiving an injection of
neural stem cells from young mice, however, they performed as well as
healthy mice did.



When the researchers tracked the stem cells in the mice's brains,
they saw that only about 5 percent of them actually developed into
neurons, suggesting the cells did not rescue memory by replacing dead
neurons, LaFerla says. Instead mice injected with stem cells developed a
far greater number of synapses, or connections between neurons, at the
damaged site than control mice did. LaFerla thinks that
neurotrophins-biochemical compounds secreted by the injected stem
cells-most likely were responsible for the effect. This finding could
open the door for drug treatments based on these compounds. "Such a
treatment would be much less risky than injecting actual cells," he
says, adding that transplanted stem cells could potentially developed
into tumors.



That risk is currently a hurdle in many stem cell therapies, says Curt
Freed <http://www.uchsc.edu/clinicalpharm/faculty/freed.html>   of the
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center <http://www.uchsc.edu>  
in Denver. For example, animal studies have shown that neurons derived
in the lab from human embryonic stem cells improve Parkinson's
symptoms; however, any residual stems cells associated with those
neurons could from masses of unwanted cells. But scientists are making
progress in refining these therapies, and the first ever trial of fetal
stem cells injected directly into the brain is currently under way
children with Batten disease, a rare and fatal illness of the nervous
system.



Freed expects transplants of neurons derived from embryonic stem cells
to enter the clinical arena soon as well. "I think Parkinson's
will be the first disease in which these cells are used, and I would say
that that's likely to happen as early as two years from now."


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra <http://primamind.blogspot.com>

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>





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