An experimental therapy that combines stem cells and gene therapy to repair spinal cord injuries in rats may lead to a new way to treat the same injury in humans.
The therapy, described in the July 27 issue of the Journal of Neuroscience, shows significant potential for repairing the spinal cord by regenerating a protective coating on the nervous system, said lead researcher Scott Whittemore of the University of Louisville.
“Other scientists have suggested this technique, but our study is the first to show that it really works,” said Whittemore, the University of Louisville Henry D. Garretson Endowed Chair in Spinal Cord Injury Research and scientific director of the Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center.
Injuries to the spinal cord can damage myelin, a coating that protects the nervous system much like the insulation around an electrical cord. When myelin is damaged or destroyed, the nerves surrounding the spine cannot adequately conduct signals to and from the brain.
Whittemore found that stem cells grafted onto damaged spinal cords in rats can develop into cells that make myelin, which in turn grows and migrates to the damaged tissue. The new cells grow even faster when combined with a gene therapy that boosts production of two substances that help nerves survive and mature, he said.
“The key word here is ‘combination,'” said Naomi Kleitman of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. “This is one of a series of new studies showing that a combination of therapies is needed for successful spinal repair.”
Whittemore’s study was funded by NINDS, National Institutes of Health, Kentucky Spinal Cord and Head Injury Research Trust, Norton Healthcare and several private foundations.
An initial $8.5 million Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) grant from the National Institutes of Health has been renewed, Whittemore announced Aug. 1. The grant will provide $10.4 million over five years.
This is the first COBRE grant at U of L to be renewed and signals the NIH’s confidence in the research being undertaken at KSCIRC, said Larry Cook, executive vice president for health affairs.
Researchers at the center, one of the largest spinal cord injury research centers in the United States, are exploring ways to:
prevent loss of nerve tissue after spinal injury promote regeneration of sensory and motor function after spinal cord injury rebuild the neural circuitry that controls locomotion modulate chemical pathways that control cell survival and cell death discover molecules that regulate spinal cord development
use gene therapy for spinal cord repair.
Since 1998, Whittemore and other faculty at the Kentucky spinal cord research center have received more than $32.5 million in research support aimed at developing new ways to repair spine injuries.
Medical Science News
Published: Monday, 15-Aug-2005
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