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Organ & Tissue Replacement and Regeneration

regenerative medicine mmp14 aging body-replacements

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#1 kevin

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Posted 21 October 2003 - 06:41 AM


The Promise of Regeneration

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Regrow Your Own
Broken heart? No problem. New liver? Coming right up. The road to regeneration starts here.
By Jennifer Kahn

By the time he was 45, cardiologist Mark Keating had reached the pinnacle of a doctor's career. He was preparing to move from his prestigious post as an investigator at the University of Utah to an even more exalted position as a professor at Harvard. He'd just won three important prizes for his comprehensive work on the genetics of heart arrhythmias. He seemed destined for even more glory in the field of cardiac genetics.

But oddly, Keating couldn't keep his mind off newts. He was particularly obsessed with an obscure species native to East Coast forests: a bandy-legged amphibian with a flat tail, blunt head, and vivid crimson dots. Red-spotted newts are endangered, but that wasn't what lured Keating away from his heart patients. Rather, newts' famous ability to heal themselves fascinated him - they can produce a new eye or sprout a leg if one is amputated, even reconnect a severed spinal cord.

By academic standards, shifting from cardiology to developmental biology is a bizarre career move. Regeneration studies is a backwater even among biologists, who have been chopping the legs off salamanders for more than 200 years without ever discovering why some of them manage to grow back. And while clues to regeneration have emerged - retinoic acid will induce some frogs to grow three new legs in place of one - the field has a history of derailing respectable scientists.

As to whether humans could ever develop similar capacities of self-repair, most biologists have concluded, albeit reluctantly, that the answer is no. There seems to be something inherently different about amphibian cells: a swamp-animal mutability that mammals - including people - simply don't possess.

But Keating remains convinced that newts hold the key to human healing. Our bodies, he points out, can already regenerate to a degree, repairing broken bones and regularly trading dead cells for new ones. Skin cells, for instance, last about two weeks, and our stomach lining molts once a month. This constant replenishment is what enables our 70-year lifespan, but cell growth is calibrated to run at a trickle: too slow to fix major damage. Lose an arm or a kidney and that's it; we can't generate the lost part any more than a car can sprout a new transmission.

Why? It's an evolutionary mystery. The ability to regrow legs and eyes seems like a clear Darwinian advantage - one that surviving generations would have retained. But a paradox of regeneration is that the higher you move up the evolutionary chain, the less likely you'll have the ability to regrow limbs or organs. Keating's mission: figure out the cause of this paradox - and reverse it.

Keating himself believes that regeneration research is on the brink of a revolution - the very place genetics was 20 years ago. "We've been studying regeneration for 200 years, sure," he shrugs. "But we've got different tools now. For the first time, we can see what's happening at the level of molecules and genes." From Keating's perspective, growing a whole arm would be a needlessly complicated parlor trick. But if our regenerative abilities could be sped up even a little, the effect would be extraordinary. "Patients with kidney failure need just 10 percent of their cells back and they can go off dialysis," says Dean Li, Keating's colleague at Utah and now his business partner. "Likewise, when you have a heart attack, there's a big difference between losing 20 percent of your heart cells and 40 percent."

But a chunk of kidney or a piece of your heart is just the beginning. Hydra Biosciences, the company they cofounded in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is also looking at the pancreas, skin, central nervous system, veins, joints, and eyes. For Keating, 48, this last possibility is of more than academic interest. His family has a history of macular degeneration - a condition that degrades the center of the retina - and he's watched at least one relative steadily lose her sight. Should Keating turn out to be right about regeneration, he might find a cure. If he's wrong, he could be squandering a brilliant career in cardiology on a pipe dream.

As an undergraduate at Princeton, Keating ran track. Here in Boston, he often commutes to his Harvard lab on foot, jogging a total of 6 miles to and from work each day. This morning, like most, he ran in the dark, arriving by 5 am despite a forecast for "lethally cold" predawn temperatures. It hardly fazes Keating. In fact, when I called to get directions to the office, he sincerely proposed that I run there.

Keating admits he's daunted by some of his more prominent Harvard colleagues. "At Utah, I was a big fish in a small pond," he says morosely over lunch at a neighborhood deli. The transition was even more difficult because it coincided with his foray into developmental biology. He did, however, enjoy an initial piece of good luck. Shortly after arriving in Cambridge, Keating found that if he suppressed one gene in a zebrafish, the fish lost its ability to regrow fins and organs and instead scarred, just like people. Maybe the gene was easier to switch on and off than anyone thought.

A stray piece of evidence seemed to bolster this theory. Experiments done on sheep in 1991 revealed that fetuses in the first two trimesters will recover from a deep cut seamlessly, but a fetus just a few weeks further along will be scarred for life. "The question isn't whether we still have this program in our genes," Keating says. "The question is, why has this program been turned off?"

More important, can it be turned back on? In Utah, Keating had attempted a rather crude experiment to see if he could get mouse cells to behave more like newt cells. Bruised or cut mammalian tissue reacts by producing scar tissue: tough, fibrous cells that quickly seal off an open wound. Newt tissue, on the other hand, grows a spongy little cap at the site of amputation. Inside that cap, something (Brockes says that a signal from thrombin, the clotting pathway is the signal in newt eye regeneration -KP)- perhaps circulating proteins - triggers a genetic program that prompts the endmost cells to reverse their developmental clocks. Like a frog becoming a tadpole, those adult muscle and bone cells "dedifferentiate" back into stem cells - which subsequently divide and proliferate, and finally mature back into whatever kind of tissue the body needs.

It's an elegant system, but the hitch was that no one had been able to get the same thing to happen in mammals. Until the fall of 1998, when, on something of a lark, Keating and his colleagues, postdoc Shannon Odelberg and researcher Chris McGann, decided to treat mouse muscle cells in a petri dish with a liquefied extract made from a newt's regenerating leg cap. Unlike newt cells, mammalian muscle cells change dramatically as they mature, growing fat bundles of ropelike fibers and merging their cytoplasms en masse, like eggs whose whites have run together. Believing that this elaborate structure could be reversed was, researchers thought, like expecting a Ming vase to morph back into a lump of raw clay and powdered pigments.

And yet, under the influence of the newt extract, that was exactly what happened. [:o] "Nobody expected it to work," admits Odelberg, still sounding baffled. In a follow-up experiment, the researchers were able to apply growth factors to dedifferentiated cells, making the stem cells mature again to resemble muscle, bone, or fat cells.

It was a staggering discovery. "People had been studying regeneration for years and had zero evidence it could happen in mammals," Li says. "It wasn't until Mark and Shannon debunked the myth of terminal differentiation that anyone believed this could work."

In light of today's stem cell shortage, Keating's discovery is especially tantalizing. Embryonic stem cells are hard to come by and difficult to work with outside the body. Injecting them into ailing patients invites the same rejection response that plagues organ transplants. The body's own stem cells pose no such problems, but they're in short supply. By contrast, there are plenty of mature cells. Harness those, Keating believes, and we could begin to repair ourselves in situ.

Jump-starting that process has been the problem, but Keating now thinks it might be as simple as delivering a key protein to the damaged area of the body. Ideally, that protein would start a cascade of genetic instructions, which in turn would prompt a cell to dedifferentiate. In fact, Keating notes, cells already dedifferentiate partway when producing scar tissue, so an extra nudge might be all they need to complete the process. Erythropoietin, a standard hormone treatment for leukemia, operates on much the same premise, accelerating the body's production of red blood cells. "My goal," he says, "is to create epo for the heart."

Keating's mouse cell miracle has yet to garner much attention outside the small community of regeneration enthusiasts. This could be because regeneration studies are still not very well respected, but another reason may be that Keating himself is not an especially energetic salesman. Tall and slender with thinning brown hair, he speaks so slowly it's distracting and has a weird tendency to sit with his arm draped over his head. When lecturing, he slides his hands down his thighs repeatedly, as though massaging his quads. Three years in, he remains something of an outsider at Harvard, and he's similarly distant from most of his peers in developmental biology.

Compared with cardiac genetics, developmental biology is poorly understood, and Keating sometimes talks glumly about the burden of being "pathless" - having to forge a new field from scratch. But his isolation may have served him well scientifically. For years, regeneration focused on urodeles - salamanders and newts - which are uniquely hard to study. Among other things, they take two years to mature, don't like to mate in the lab, and can't be cloned or made transgenic. One lifelong salamander researcher has called the animals "our curse."

Keating dropped newts in favor of zebrafish, which can regenerate an amputated fin, a bad eye, severed spinal cord, or even a large chunk of heart. (Keating's current work involves cutting out 20 percent of the heart in different strains of zebrafish and seeing which ones recover.) Unlike newts, however, zebrafish reproduce quickly and are amenable to genetic manipulation. There's even a zebrafish genome project.

Keating is deep in the rather workmanlike task of identifying all the genes involved in heart regeneration, using the zebrafish heart-amputation test. Because each gene codes for a specific protein, Keating hopes he'll be able to use that information to induce regrowth simply by supplying the body with the right proteins at the right time. An infusion after a heart attack, for instance, could slow the scarring process while boosting the production of healthy cardiomyocites.

What remains puzzling, however, is why human regeneration would have been turned off in the first place. Keating's theory is that once we left the swamp and became warm-blooded, our survival priorities changed and scarring became essential, since it kept us from bleeding to death and lowered the chance that we'd develop a fatal infection. "Scarring is the body's duct tape," says Li. Or as Keating puts it, "There was not a huge evolutionary advantage to regrowing your heart if a tiger had eaten half of it."

This is certainly true, but there may be a more fundamental reason our limb restoration program doesn't work anymore: cancer. In order to regenerate, the body has to produce lots of new cells quickly, in a localized area - a process that happens to look a lot like the growth of a tumor. Conceivably, at some point in evolutionary history, it became more important for our body to destroy fast-dividing cells than to preserve them. What this means in terms of restoring our regenerative abilities is harder to determine. Under the circumstances, one might expect animals that regenerate regularly to get cancer more often, but oddly enough the opposite is true: salamanders are one of a very small number of species that don't get cancer at all.

Keating isn't especially worried about cancer, or about any of the slew of possible Hollywood-thriller scenarios (unstoppable cell division! Frankenhearts!) "Cancer is caused by mutated DNA," he says. "And overgrowth diseases are very rare. When we damage our liver, it grows in normal, not twice the size and full of tumors."

For regeneration to work, this would pretty much have to be true, since muscle growth involves a ream of detail that medicine still can't handle - like automatically aligning heart cells so that they contract in tandem. That's not the only obstacle for controlled regeneration, and it's a long walk from zebrafish to people in any case. But the path is no murkier than the one geneticists set out on two decades ago, and the immediate payoff could be greater. The next leap forward in human evolution may be a step closer to the newt.

#2 Bruce Klein

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Posted 21 October 2003 - 08:10 AM

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MediaLink:

Date: 09-24-03
Author: William Haseltine
Source: International Assocation of Biogerontologists 10th Congress
Title: Keynote Speech
XRef: Immortality News - Regenerative Medicene
Comment: Wow.. this is what Haseltine talks about as well at IABG
")) ?>


MediaLink - Regenerative Medicene - Bill Haseltine

Human Genome Sciences

William Haseltine
Human Genome Sciences


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#3 kevin

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Posted 24 October 2003 - 05:37 AM

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Link:
http://www.betterhum...ID=2003-10-23-5
Date: 10-22-03
Author: Gabe Romain
Source: http://www.betterhumans.com
Title: Gene Therapy Rebuilds Gums
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Gene Therapy Rebuilds Gums
Gabe Romain
Betterhumans Staff
Thursday, October 23, 2003, 5:17:37 PM


Gene therapy can restore damage caused by severe gum disease, suggest animal studies.

Gum disease is an infection of the tissues and bone that supports the teeth and is usually caused by a buildup of plaque.

Plaque, an invisible sticky layer of germs that forms naturally on the teeth and gums, contains bacteria that produce toxins that irritate and damage the gums.

If gum disease is not treated it can cause teeth to loosen and fall out.

It is the biggest cause of tooth loss in adults in the US.

Regenerated tooth support


To treat gum disease, William Giannobile of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and colleagues inserted a gene for bone morphogenetic protein, a bone-stimulating factor, into an inactivated virus.

They used the virus to transfer the genes into skin cells that were then transplanted into bone defects surrounding the teeth of animals.

The genetically engineered cells regenerated tooth-supporting structures and the protective coating on tooth roots.

New era in dentistry?

Although more studies are needed to confirm whether the gene therapy is feasible in humans, clinical human gene transfer studies for head and neck cancer treatment are already underway.

Patients with these conditions will be among the first to undergo gene therapy to repair damaged salivary glands due to cancer radiation treatment or Sjogren's syndrome.

Experts predict common dental conditions such as oral ulcers, delayed tooth eruption, gum disease, plaque build up, bone loss and jaw disorders such as temporomandibular joint disease can also be treated with gene therapy.

As with many diseases, however, gum disease involves multiple genes and interactions between genes and the environment, so advances in gene therapy may take some time.

Nevertheless, researchers think that by 2015 dentists will be able to use gene therapy as one of their treatment options.

Giannobile's research was presented in San Francisco at the annual meeting of the American Dental Association.

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#4 kevin

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Posted 27 October 2003 - 06:56 PM

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MediaLink:
Rebuilding the Ageing Heart with Stem Cells
Date: 11-01-01
Author: Karen Michel
Source: The DNA Files
Title:
GENETICS OF AGING & LONGEVITY -br-
Search for the Fountain of Youth
")) ?>


MediaLink


#5 kevin

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Posted 07 November 2003 - 04:34 AM

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Link:
http://www.betterhum...ID=2003-11-06-3
Date: 11-06-03
Author: staff
Source: http://www.betterhumans.com
Title: New Joints Grown in Arthritic Fingers and Toes
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New Joints Grown in Arthritic Fingers and Toes
Betterhumans Staff
Thursday, November 06, 2003, 4:46:51 PM

New finger and toe joints have been successfully grown in people who have rheumatoid arthritis, an approach that could reduce immobility and pain associated with the disease.

The tissue engineering feat, which could be clinically available within a year, was accomplished by surgeons from Tampere University of Technology in Finland.

It utilizes a special scaffold that allows tissue growth between bones, and has already provided functional joints for more than 100 people.

Rheumatoid arthritis

Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disorder in which the immune system attacks joints.

People with rheumatoid arthritis with particularly damaged joints can undergo surgery in which a plastic implant is inserted between bones.

Such implants, however, can be attacked by the body and break, after which they must be removed and replaced.

Yarn scaffold

Instead of a plastic implant, professor Pertti Törmälä and colleagues from Tampere University used a special scaffold of yarn full of tiny holes to regrow joints.

They insert the scaffold, which measures 10-millimeters by three millimeters, between bones in fingers and toes.

Tissue grows through the holes and the biodegradable scaffold disintegrates within 18 months, leaving a healthy and functional new joint in its place.

First tested five years ago, the joint has demonstrated long-term benefits and has now received backing from the EU, which has provided funding to expand research to clinics in Finland, Sweden, Germany, Italy and Turkey.

This research will continue for a year, after which Törmälä and colleagues aim to make the procedure more widely available

#6 kevin

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Posted 07 November 2003 - 04:52 AM

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Link:
http://www.eurekaler...u-cmd081303.php
Date: 08-13-03
Author:
Chriss Swaney -br-
swaney@andrew.cmu.edu -br-
ph 412-268-5776
Source: http://www.cmu.edu/
Title: Carnegie Mellon develops new process for growing bone
XRef: http://imminst.org/f...f=117&t=1574&s=
")) ?>


Carnegie Mellon develops new process for growing bone
Researchers use new synthetic hydro-gel
PITTSBURGH-- Carnegie Mellon University's Jeffrey Hollinger and his research team will receive $1.12 million over the next four years from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop a new therapy for regenerating bone.
Bone, often called the structural steel and reinforced concrete of the human body, supports the body the way a steel framework supports a skyscraper, and it protects its vital organs the way a cast-concrete roof protects' its building occupants. "Unfortunately, bone loss is an unavoidable consequence of aging, osteoporosis and many traumatic accidents,'' Hollinger said.

To address the challenges of safe and effective therapy to restore form and function to deficient bone architecture, Hollinger's research team at Carnegie Mellon's Bone Tissue Engineering Center has developed an innovative therapy for growing bone by inserting a non-viral gene into the body to induce cells to grow bone.

"We are injecting the NTF gene into a site where bone is deficient via a synthetic hydro-gel made from a hyaluronic acid-based polymer,'' Hollinger said. "The hydro-gel/NTF is non-immunogenic and is designed to restore form and function to bone deficiencies.''

Some of the first pre-clinical trials will involve growing bone in the jaw, said Hollinger. And according to transportation officials, about 10 percent of vehicle accident injuries involve the jaw and the flat bones in the face. "Restoring periodontal bone loss is a high priority for our team, and Bruce Doll, head of the Department of Periodontology at the University of Pittsburgh is leading this challenge,'' Hollinger said.

Through ever-improving surgical techniques, the replacement of bone has been done via bone grafting either from the patient's own body or from animal (usually cow) bone. But because the human body is inclined to reject most 'non-self' grafts, Hollinger's synthetic approach to growing bone will eliminate immune rejections. His research team includes Doll at the University of Pittsburgh's Dental School and Carnegie Mellon Bone Tissue Engineering Center scientists Yunhua Hu and Huihua Fu, the two scientists who perfected the NTF-hydrogel therapy, and whose work was the foundation for the NIH grant. .

In addition to growing bone for injuries to the jaw, Hollinger's research team plans to use the new bone regeneration process to treat osteoporotic fractures, and in other applications in other pasrts of the body including the spine, pelvis and all powerful thigh bone – about 20 inches long and more than an inch across at the midshaft. A mature body contains more than 600 muscles and 206 bones, not counting the tiny seasmoid bones – like sesame seeds – embedded in the tendons of the thumb, big toe and other pressure points.

"After blood, bone is the most frequently transplanted tissue. Current therapies for bone grafting fall short of the mark. The Bone Tissue Engineering Center is developing exciting new bone theraputics that will offer surgeons and their patients much better options. And the NTF/injectable hydrogel is one such example therapy from the Carnegie Mellon-Pitt team,'' Hollinger said.


###

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#7 kevin

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Posted 09 November 2003 - 12:12 AM

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Link:
http://www.eurekaler...s-esu110603.php
Date: 11-08-03
Author: Holly Korschun -br-
hkorsch@emory.edu -br-
404-727-3990
Source: http://www.emory.edu
Title: Emory scientists use enzymes to enhance regeneration of damaged peripheral nerves in mice
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Emory scientists use enzymes to enhance regeneration of damaged peripheral nerves in mice
Scientists at Emory University School of Medicine were able to enhance significantly the re-growth of damaged peripheral nerves in mice by treating them with enzymes that counteracted a growth-blocking mechanism. The research offers the potential for improving functional recovery after peripheral nerve injuries. The Emory scientists were led by Arthur English, PhD, professor of cell biology, with faculty colleagues Robert McKeon, PhD and Erica Werner, PhD and former Emory student M.L. Groves. Results of the research will be presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience on November 8 in New Orleans.

Peripheral nerves extend from the spinal cord to targets in the periphery such as muscle and skin. Individual peripheral nerves contain thousands of individual fibers, called axons, which project to specific targets. When a peripheral nerve is damaged, axons between the injury site and muscle or skin degenerate and function is lost. Although peripheral nerve axons are capable of regenerating after such injuries, in humans this regeneration is modest at best and there currently is no effective clinical treatment.

One reason peripheral nerves do not regenerate well is the presence of growth inhibitory substances, called proteoglycans, within the environment of the damaged nerve. In an effort to improve the ability of axons to regenerate, the Emory scientists attempted to modify this inhibitory environment following peripheral nerve injury in mice. They treated the peripheral portion of severed nerves with each of three enzymes that degrade specific types of proteoglycans.

During the first two weeks after the injury, axons regenerated through enzyme-treated tissues much more effectively than through untreated tissues. Not only did the axons regenerate, those that did extended more than twice as far.

"This study shows that treatment with enzymes that degrade proteoglycans offers the potential to enhance regeneration, and may lead to improved recovery of function after peripheral nerve injuries," says Dr. English.


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#8 kevin

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Posted 10 November 2003 - 05:17 AM

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Link:
http://bioethicsprin...2/session7.html
Date: 09-13-02
Author:

H. Lee Sweeney, Ph.D., -br-
Professor and Chairman of Physiology, -br-
University of Pennsylvania.
Source: Presidents Council on BioEthics
Title: Session 7: Enhancement 5: Genetic Enhancement of Muscle
XRef: to come
Comment: This is a transcript of the meeting held with Dr. Sweeney where he brought the council up to speed as to the current state of knowledge in muscle regeneration. I would be interested in his opinion on how the Council views the treating of the muscle wasting due to aging as 'enhancement' rather than therapy. I realize that this post is EXTREMELY lengthy, but I think it quite important that this, and probably the transcripts of other consultants reside also here, as they show proof positive of the knowledge which is gained by the council in making their decisions and is not subject to any modification except by us. -br-
-br-
It seems obvious from the transcript below that real therapeutic benefits are not only possible but already potentially exist. I know more than a few aged individuals who would GLADLY spend the money, and take the risks, which appear to be low thus far, in order to enhance the few remaining years they have left. I personally wouldn't at this point avail myself of the technology at this point in my life, but with declining quality of life, I would certainly reconsider. This is an example of a technology whose discovery we should be hearing SHOUTED from the rootops rather than in hushed tones accompanied by the worrying about what the ATHLETIC COMMUNITY might do with the ability to increase muscle strengh in Athletes... Pardon my language but WHERE THE HELL ARE THESE GUYS PRIORITIES!? -br-
-br-
What is the matter with the people we have put in charge of our health and well being, from the politicians to the medical community? That this information has not been widespread in the media indicates what will happen with other anti-aging breakthroughs. People want FUNCTIONALITY even MORE THAN they want EXTENDED YEARS. Here we have exactly the possibility of that! .... and yet.. it is still being treated as something circumspect instead of proudly announcing that the need for wheelchairs, walkers, and space in nursing homes may be coming to an end. As it is obvious our governments and medical administrators are not going to disseminate this type of information, it is up to each and every one of us to spread the hope that these technologies that are HERE TODAY have to offer!
")) ?>


SIXTH MEETING
Friday, September 13, 2002

Session 7: Enhancement 5: Genetic Enhancement of Muscle
H. Lee Sweeney, Ph.D.,
Professor and Chairman of Physiology,
University of Pennsylvania.



CHAIRMAN KASS: All right. I know there are some counsel members with planes to catch, and I don't want us to waste any more of Dr. Sweeney's time. We're delighted to welcome Dr. Lee Sweeney, who is Professor and Chairman of the Department of Physiology at the University of Pennsylvania, who has done just a significant amount of outstanding work on muscle physiology and who is going to speak to us today about the genetic enhancement of skeletal muscle and its performance.

Thank you very much, Dr. Sweeney, for being with us.

Push your button there. There we go.

DR. SWEENEY: Thank you.

Yeah, I'm going to just try to give you in half an hour or so background about some of the work we're doing, and then I'm hoping just to allow you to drive a lot of the discussion because I'll set up some of the issues that I see, but as a scientist, I'm afraid I don't think some of the ethical ramifications through quite to the extent of the discussions I've already heard this morning.

My interest is in disease states of both skeletal and cardiac muscle. I'm going to restrict it to skeletal muscle because I think it gives you a good example of really how gray the boundary is between therapeutics and enhancement when one is starting to think about what can be done with genetic manipulation in adults.

Skeletal muscle is a big target in a person because it makes up the majority of the mass of their body, and it's an interesting tissue in that it has built into it cells called satellite cells which are not differentiated muscle cells, but which are actually cells that are called upon to divide and differentiate and regenerate the skeletal muscle.

So they're not really a resident stem cell population because they're not pleuripotential like a true stem cell, but they're an uncommitted set of cells that can with the proper stimuli be induced to become skeletal muscle. They can become other types of tissue as well, but a fairly limited repertoire.

Now, my interest in this began with years ago the beginning of the whole promise of gene therapy, and of course, the idea at the beginning of gene therapy was really to tackle the simplest of genetic diseases, those that involved single genes and usually the genes being missing or at least defective, which was the cause of a large number of diseases, most of them fairly rare diseases.

The issue, and still the issue, the recent gene therapy really hasn't as quickly progressed as we all would have hoped it would have ten years ago, is because the problems are really finding the right vector for a given tissue, that is, a delivery device to actually get the genetic material into the adult tissue, and then also figuring out how to get it there, the delivery.

So these are still the key stumbling blocks in gene therapy today, although great inroads have been made.

Now, in terms of muscle what is sort of emerging as the best sort of ways to deliver genes to muscle are sort of listed here, and this is as of today. Muscle is actually quite good at taking up so-called naked DNA or just plasmid DNA. This is DNA that is not encapsulated in anything.

When I say quite good, I mean it does it with some efficiency. It's perhaps one or two percent of the cells if you inject DNA into a given muscle would take something up.


So this is not an inefficiency that's useful in correcting a primary genetic disease of the muscle itself. However, this would be useful in terms of getting the muscle to produce a substance that would then be secreted into the blood.

And, in fact, this technique has been shown to be successful in an agricultural setting where a colleague of mine has taken DNA that codes for the growth hormone releasing hormone. This is actually a protein which stimulates the release of growth hormone, and in doing so, he can demonstrate that the pigs will now secrete much larger much larger levels of growth hormone.

Obviously one of the other problems with it is it's transient, but in that sort of setting perhaps it's useful to be transient just to sort of give them a growth boost through some period, and then it will go away, but obviously not something one could think of for permanent sort of genetic correction, and especially not a genetic correction of the muscle itself.

Now, viruses are still the preferred gene delivery vehicles in terms of efficiency. Getting genes into a given tissue are what viruses are engineered to do, and so they can be reengineered to deliver therapeutic genes instead of viral genes.

And probably the best vector for muscle is a virus that's known as AAV, which stands for adeno-associated virus. It's a virus that's unrelated to adenovirus, which has been used, as you're probably aware, in gene therapy trials with complications, and the most severe which took place at my own institution.

But this is a different virus that actually does not cause any known disease in humans. Often it can be found in 20 percent or so of the human population that have been infected by AAV with no consequences that can be demonstrated.

And in the last maybe two years a number of different sort of variants or serotypes of the virus have been isolated, and at least two of them are extremely efficient at targeting skeletal muscle. And so there are now gene therapy trials that have begun and many more that are about to be proposed and started that use this virus to try to get genes into skeletal muscle or in the liver. It turns out that this virus is also very good at targeting the liver, which would be very useful in diseases where one wants something secreted into the blood, like in the case of hemophilia.

There's an ongoing trial now with AAV targeting the liver to get the liver to secrete in this case Factor 9 for patients with Factor 9 deficiency.

Adult stem cells obviously are useful in sort of the idea of helping regenerate the tissue, although I must say that although there are a number of types of adult stem cells that can become muscle, again, efficiency becomes the problem, whether they're muscle or bone marrow derived stem cells. It's very difficult to get a large percentage of the muscle rebuilt using this approach in animal models where it's been attempted.

Nonetheless, we and others see the ability to use adult stem cells now as not in the stem cell sense of rebuilding the tissue, but perhaps in the sense of viewing them as a vector where one would take the adult stem cells in the laboratory, put new genes into the stem cells. That would then allow the tissue that they've incorporated in to secrete a substance that would then affect the surrounding tissue or if it's designed to go into the blood.

So you could sort of put adult stem cells then not only in the tissue regenerating sense, but in the sense of being a vector to carry genes into a tissue, to incorporate into the tissue, then to produce something else in that tissue.

And the advantage that they may have over viruses is one of the easiest systemic delivery. In many disease situations it may be that one could simply put the adult stem cells into the blood and they would home in on the tissue. They would home to the tissue that was actually being damaged by whatever the disease process is, and so it would be a very efficient way of targeting the tissue, which with viruses is more difficult at least at this point in time.


So I'm going to give you an example then of using the adeno-associated viral mediated gene transfer, but the example is actually one that we're now trying to do with adult stem cells, which is why I brought this up, because we think we can accomplish the same thing and deliver it much more simply using stem cells that are bone marrow derived from in this case we're working with both adult human cells, as well as adult rodent derived cells.

Adeno-associated virus, as I said, has the huge advantage for skeletal muscle in that it readily infects it. In fact, this may be the preferred tissue target of this virus at least for various forms of this virus.

It's limiting in that the size of its entire genome is only on the order of about 4.7 kilobases. So this is very small and really smaller than most genes in the human, and so one can only make synthetic genes that code for relatively small proteins. And so one has to be judicious in the choice of what one can attempt to do with this virus.

Delayed onset of expression, perhaps more so than some of the other viruses, but nevertheless, with the more robust infection that one gets with serotype one and five, expression commences within a week of injection of the virus into the tissue or systemic delivery of the virus into the tissue.

There's no viral gene expression. This is one of the big advantages of using this type of vector. You can make the synthetic vector without any viral genes, and because of that, there's no immune response against the virus itself.

Obviously there could still be immune response against whatever the product that you're causing it to make, but an example I'll give you, which is one of the advantages of it, what we're making is not something that's missing from the body, but something that we're just trying to get the body to make more of. And so there's nothing for the immune surveillance to pick up on, and so no possibility of immune response.

It integrates at a low frequency, which is both useful, but also a point of some concern in sort of the regulatory and side effect case. The integration, with any integrating virus there are two things to worry about. One is the possibility of oncogenesis being initiated by an integration event.

We have not seen this in our animal models, and other people have not seen this. So the possibility with this virus seems relatively low because there's some evidence that the integration events of AAV are somewhat site specific, and so not very likely to induce oncogenesis.

The other problem, of course, is whether or not one could get germ line transmission, and compared to something like lentivirus, the ability to do germ line transmission is not zero, but it's fairly low probability of germ line transmission, but again, this depends on the route of administration.

It would be more likely that you might get germ line transmission if you're doing a vascular delivery than of direct injection into the tissue, and the duration of expression, because of the integration, essentially is the life of the nucleus that you infected. And so as long as that cell in that nucleus exists, one will get expression. And so for the animal models that we look at, it's the life of the animal essentially.

Just to show you what efficient means, here's a cross-section through a muscle. So these are now -- if you think of the muscle fibers and muscle cells as very long cylinders, this is now slicing through them so that you basically just see their circumference and not their length.

And as you can see in this example, this is now using AAV-1. Essentially every muscle, well, every muscle in the field is now producing a protein that gives a color and an enzymatic reaction that's developed in the laboratory, a bacterial protein that can be used to give this colormetric readout, and you can see that every muscle fiber in the field is blue, and in fact, one can do vascular injection with this virus, and every fiber and every muscle virtually in the leg of the animal will be blue after vascular administration of a large enough dose.

So the efficiency is extremely high if one puts in enough of the virus.

So potential applications, which is what got me interested in using this in the first place, obviously the initial goal of all gene therapies of this sort was primarily genetic diseases, and for muscle that would mean Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy is the most common, but also others, such as the limb-girdle muscular dystrophies, myotonic muscular dystrophy, and whatnot, where one can point to a genetic defect in a single gene as the cause of the disease.

A more difficult problem, but actually in some ways, I mean, biologically a more difficult problem, but in fact, the problem that we focused on initially, which is a very real problem in this society where the society is living to be older and older, is the fact that as we get older our muscle function, our skeletal muscle function diminishes both in size of the muscle as well as the relative strength of the muscle and this is a big problem not only from an ambulatory standpoint, but also from a whole body metabolic standpoint.

If the mass of skeletal muscle drops below a critical threshold, then the whole body metabolism is no longer supported properly because the muscle actually functions not only to move the body, but as an important metabolic organ within the body.


Then the last sort of issue, which is actually a trial, trials have been ongoing in this area, is the use of gene transfer into muscle to get therapeutic proteins in the blood, such as Factor 9 deficiency.

So the initial hemophilia trials with Factor 9 were trying to actually get muscle to secrete Factor 9, but now they've shifted to liver because the liver is just a better organ for secretion into the blood than muscle is, although the muscle is capable of it.

So I want to first tell you about where we started some five years ago, which was looking at this problem that the NIH has coined sarcopenia. I think they coined a term to sort of make it sound more like a disease, probably for congressional purposes, but basically what they're really talking about is this progressive loss of muscle mass in force that essentially begins in the fourth decade life in humans and then progresses throughout.

It's slowed, but it's not prevented by exercise, and obviously as I've already mentioned has negative impacts on health and quality of life. It occurs in all mammals, which is useful because that means all of the laboratory animals one works with undergo the same process, and since they live for a much shorter period of time than humans, their life spans are much contracted.

The whole sort of progression occurs on a time scale that one can approach in the laboratory, and our hypothesis back in '96 or seven when we began this was that in large part we thought that what it was really due to was not inactivity. There had been a lot of discussion that as people got older they were just inactive and that's really the main thing that drove it, but we really thought there was a more fundamental cause, especially since there were studies showing that exercise could slow it down but not stop it.

And that was the fact that the repair mechanisms of skeletal muscle decline as you get older, and this causes the muscle to lose function because it's essentially not being repaired properly, and this goes back to what I said at the beginning, that it has within it a resident population of cells, these so-called satellite cells, that when the muscle is damaged -- and muscle is always damaged as you're using it -- are called upon to repair the muscle and rebuild it.

So this sort of rebuilding process involves some sort of damage signal coming out of the muscle which then activates the satellite cells to begin to proliferate, and they proliferate, then they make the commitment to be muscle, and then they either fuse with the existing muscle to repair it, or if the muscle has been severely damaged, they form new muscle.

So what is involved in this are a number of growth factors, some that drive the process, some that inhibit the process in sort of a yin and yang, but the one that we felt was really the most critical and the one that might be the candidate for what's going wrong in aging is a growth factor called IGF-1, which stands for insulin-like growth factor-1, which in normal muscle is involved in growth. It drives protein synthesis, and it decreases protein degradation, and importantly form the repair standpoint, it stimulates this population of satellite cells to both proliferate and differentiate.

And this is an important fact that it can do both because many of the growth factors will drive proliferation but block differentiation, and so increasing their levels could actually interfere with repair, which has been shown in some cases, but here you have one that has a little built in clock. It will drive proliferation for a while through one pathway, and then it will drive through this pathway, and then it will drive differentiation through another pathway, which it turns on with the delay.

So just the sort of thing you might want to try to drive more successful growth and repair. And the reason we thought it might be a problem in aging is because it's really part of the whole growth hormone IGF-1 axis, which as you know, the signals from the hypothalamus, the growth hormone releasing hormone, that are then taken to the anterior pituitary to stimulate it to produce growth hormone go down with aging.

The levels of growth hormone in the blood go down. The levels of IGF-1 produced by the liver; the liver produces all of the IGF-1 that circulates in the body. All of these levels go down with aging.

And what that means is that the IGF-1 levels in the various tissues of the body will also be diminished with aging.


Note: Nadia Rosenthal's presentation at the IABG indicates that it is the tissue specific form of IGF-1 which is mostly responsible for sattelite differentiaton and proliferation -KP

Now, tissues like muscle and other tissues of the body have two sources of IGF-1. They make it themselves under conditions of either injury or rapid growth, but also they have an IGF-1 input that comes from the liver that's ongoing throughout their life.

And so it's this component in particular that's being lost in the aging animal. And so we sought to essentially replace it by supplementing the amount of IGF-1 that the muscle itself could make.

So the strategy was quite simple that we took. We would use gene delivery into the muscle to give it a synthetic gene to have it produce more IGF-1 so it would not be particularly dependent on the liver for a source of IGF-1.

And then the question was: would that then in muscle promote growth and regenerative pathways and would that, in turn, allow the muscle to function throughout the life of the animal without the aging related loss?

So it's a very simple synthetic gene that we put together using a muscle specific promoter driving the rodent IGF-1, and then it's flanked by the viral ITRs and packaged into the AAV viral capsid, and then just to inject into the animals either a vascular delivery into the leg or a direct injection into specific muscles.

And we could show -- this is just using PCR to detect the existence now of our synthetic gene that four months, nine months, even two years after injection the synthetic gene is present and producing IGF-1 messenger RNA.

So then we asked the question with it: is this going to increase the rate of muscle regeneration and maintain mass and old age? And this is the paper that I included in your packet.

What we showed was that if we injected mice, essentially middle aged mice or late middle age in mice -- mice that live to be about 27 to 30 months in age at least in our colonies, and so we injected them about halfway through their life where they were all just beginning to start losing muscle mass, and then we asked, you know, what would their muscle mass in force and force for cross-section look like when they became old?

And so looking at them at 27 months, which was nearing the end of their life, they normally would have experienced in terms of mass about a 15 to 18 percent drop over that age period compared to a six month old mouse when they're sort of at their peak.

Whereas if we had injected them in middle age, they maintained the same mass or even a little greater than they had when they were younger. The same with the amount of force they were able to produce. Their muscles were able to produce normal force instead of showing the decline in force that they would normally see, and the force for cross-sectional area was maintained, as well.

But the speed of the muscle was maintained and the power output was maintained to an even greater extent because one of the other things that happens as the animals get old, as mammals get old, is they selectively lose their fast and most powerful fiber type.

So skeletal muscle is a heterogeneous tissue in terms of it has some of the fibers in it that are small. Some are big; some are slow; some are fast. We lose the very fastest ones as we get older and preferentially replace them with slower fibers. That's one reason why some of the first athletic things that go are your ability to compete in power events or speed events, because that's the first loss that you experience before you really lose muscle endurance or any of those sorts of properties.

And we were able to prevent that totally. The mice did not lose any of their fast fibers, and they had the same speed and power output when they were 27 month old muscles as they did as animals that were only six months of age.

[>] So from that we were able to conclude that IGF-1 over-expression could prevent all of the hallmarks of age related atrophy and loss of skeletal muscle function in mammalian aging, at least based on the rodent model, and now we're hoping to pursue this in larger animal models.

The skeletal muscle regeneration rate is diminished in old animals, and we showed that in another paper other than the one I showed you, and that seems to be the primary problem, that even if you injure the old muscle, it cannot mount a normal regenerative response, but if you maintain IGF-1 expression, it can maintain a normal repair response, and this also, of course, is this hypothesis that we were looking at.

And also it suggests that one could go about this whole pathway as a therapeutic means of maintaining muscle mass either through the strategy that we used so far in these animals, which is to give them an IGF-1 gene supplement or, as I'll mention at the end, one can think about doing it in other ways that might actually be a little simpler to achieve that we're still evaluating.

This also suggested that maybe in dystrophic muscle where the rate of muscle degeneration or the rate of muscle damage is so high that it exceeds the rate of the muscle to repair it, we wanted to ask the question: if you actually increase the rate of muscle repair by up regulating IGF-1 production, could you slow down the damage, the cumulative damage in these dystrophic animals and maintain their muscle mass?

So that's what we looked at, and here is just now comparing a dystrophic muscle where now we've taken a transgenic approach, but we've also done this with virus, showing that -- this isn't projecting very well, at least not from where I am, but this, the IGF-1 producing tissue shows a lot less of degenerative signs than the dystrophic muscle where there's lots of fragmentation of fibers, lots of clumping, lots of regeneration.

There's infiltration from macrophages because there's an ongoing destruction and inflammatory response in the muscles. Even in the diaphragm, which is virtually destroyed by the time these animals reach about 20 months of age, there's been massive sort of hypertrophy and hyperplasia in the diaphragm. So the diaphragm has become much larger and stronger, and interestingly, the amount of connective tissue.

So here one of the big problems is that as the muscle is destroyed, it basically becomes like a rubberband. It's replaced with fibrotic tissue and fat infiltration.

The driving IGF-1 over-expression not only drives more successful regeneration, but it prevented a lot of the fibrosis. So you can see the normal amount of fibrosis is measured by collagen content here in the dystrophic mouse, and we've normalized that and sort of brought that down to sort of normal levels with the IGF-1 over-expression in the MDX mouse versus just IGF-1 over-expression alone or wildtype.

And furthermore, this is now injecting a dye into the blood stream of the animal and let the animal run around, exercise a little bit, and then see if the dye is taken up in the muscles because normally the dye would be excluded because the muscle membrane would be intact.

This is showing that in the dystrophic muscle they're so fragile and being damaged at such a high rate that the dye penetrates quite easily either in the diaphragm or in the muscle that's being used to run at a very high rate, whereas in the same sort of animals, same dystrophic animal that's now over-expressing IGF-1, the fibers are being maintained in such a better state of repair that there's very little dye penetration in either the diaphragm or the leg muscle, suggesting that these muscles are going to be able to be preserved.

And so this is something that we would now like to really look at in large animal models because there are dog models of muscular dystrophy, with the idea of trying to evaluate whether this would be a potential basis for thinking of therapies in humans, and again, either delivery of an IGF-1 gene or some other way of driving this regenerative capacity is a way to think about attacking this general sort of category of human diseases, the muscular dystrophies, and it may not -- you might not even have to understand totally the primary problem if you could just drive the regeneration for some of the muscular dystrophies where it's really still not very clear what the primary problem is.

So this all leads to the idea that this IGF-1 signaling can increase satellite cell proliferation under growth and repair mechanisms that will drive muscle hypertrophy in extreme conditions, even muscle hyperplasia. Hyperplasia means the muscle is actually making more muscle fibers, not just repairing its existing ones or making them larger.

Note: Can you say musclehead?

So I addressed these first two issues that we were interested in, but then it also suggests that IGF-1 over-expression should increase the rate and amount of skeletal muscle growth in young animals, and indeed, we showed that early on that that's true.

If you inject one leg of a mouse and not the other leg while it's in its young adult ages, you can actually show that the muscles of the leg get larger. This is, again, looking at the diameter. It's on the order of about 18 to 20 percent larger, and this is a sedentary animal.

And so this is one leg versus the other leg. Just the only difference here is the injection of the synthetic gene to make IGF-1, and if you do it systemically and look at all of the muscles of the animal, you can see here is a forelimb of an animal where there's no over-expression of IGF-1. Here is IGF-1 over-expression in all of the forelimb muscles, and here at the hind limb.

And so you can see there's pretty massive hypertrophy, again, on the order of 20 to 25 percent overall in the adult animal, and the gains are even larger during the rapid growth phases. So in a young animal that's growing, it may outstrip its age-matched control by as much as 40 percent at a given point in its life in terms of its muscular mass.

So there are a lot of benefits then from IGF-1 over-expression, but from the standpoint of now I've been talking in terms of trying to use it therapeutically, but obviously from what I just showed you, one could think about it in terms of a gene enhancement, in terms of either an animal or a human.

And in terms of a human, those were some of the relevant papers, but in terms of humans, the question that we were asked so often and that has been really since the day we published our first paper on this on people's minds: could this sort of gene transfer into skeletal muscle actually be used for a genetic enhancement of athletic performance or even just cosmetic purposes?

Just say you'd like your pectoralis muscles to be a little larger because you want to look a little better at the beach. Just take a few injections of the virus, and a month later while you're watching television, your muscles have gotten bigger.

So, you know, a lot of implications in terms of genetic enhancement, and so I'll show you a little bit of our attempts to now evaluate this in a rat model. The rats are easy to sort of train. We didn't have much luck trying to make the mice exercise for us, but rats are fairly cooperative.

So we had the rats climb ladders with weights velcroed to their tails, and so fairly large weights that we would increase over the time of the training, and so this is sort of a progressive weight training protocol for eight weeks.

What we did was we took control rats who were not asked to exercise, and we injected the IGF-1 virus into one leg, but not the other, and then we had weight training animals where, again, we injected IGF-1 virus into one leg but not the other, and then we had another group where we went through the weight training and then let the de-train for three months. And three months would normally be enough time to lose all of the benefits from the weight training. This is one of the depressing things about exercise.

You know, you can work as hard as you want for two months straight and then sit back for three months and do nothing, and it's like you never did anything. So we had the rats go through that, too, because we wanted to address whether the IGF-1 would help maintain the mass once you stopped, which would also be of interest in terms of an athletic population or an elderly population.


So what we saw was in terms of the muscle mass -- this is after the eight weeks -- so this is the average mass of the animals that did nothing. In the leg where the IGF-1 was injected, on average the muscles are about 15 percent larger.

In the weight trained animals, they worked very hard. It was really quite a severe weight training exercise, and we were able to induce about a 23 percent increase in mass, and in the animals in their legs that had the IGF-1, they experienced an ever larger increase in mass, up to about 32 percent.

But in terms of the force output of their muscles, it was even a more striking difference in that the IGF-1 injected muscles with no exercise got almost 16, 17 percent stronger on average, whereas the ones that were weight trained were actually no stronger than the animals that had IGF-1 and sat in their cages for the two months. They were about the same strength, but the muscles that had the combination of weight training and IGF-1 were almost 30 percent stronger.


So the effect in mass is not as large as the effect on the overall strength of the muscle, and the reason for that was, in fact, the severe weight training had lowered the sort of force per unit mass of the muscle in the weight trained animals, whereas we had an enhancement in the IGF-1 treated animals, and sort of an intermediate with the weight training and IGF-1 together, and the reason for that is shown. Again, some cross-sections of muscle.

What happened in the exercised animals, and I'm not sure why my slides aren't projecting that well, but what happened there was the weight training was severe enough that we actually had a fair amount of injury and fibrosis in the muscle, and so that's what happens to athletes that can overtrain.


You know, you damage the muscles and you get fibrosis. Then it sort of works against you. It lowers the sort of strength per unit mass of the muscle, whereas the IGF-1 was so effective at the repair that even though the muscle was being massively overloaded, it rebuilt itself and looks just like healthy tissue and had normal sort of force for cross-sectional area.

So a number of benefits, and then the last benefit was when the animal stopped. You can see during the de-training, the weight trained animals went back down, and then after two months, as I said, they're back down almost to where they started before they lifted a single weight, whereas in the muscles that had IGF-1, the decline percentage-wise was a lot smaller, and they ended up with some gain over weight training alone and certainly a gain over just IGF-1 alone.

And so they were able to maintain some of the weight training benefit at least three months after the cessation of the exercise.

So this is sort of a summary of all that I was saying, but the bottom line, just to speed this along a little bit, is that this approach certainly would lead to genetic enhancement of athletic performance because it would increase the rate in amount of skeletal muscle growth with resistance exercise. It would increase the rate and extensiveness of repair following an injury. So you'd be better able to maintain muscle mass, strength, and speed after the training stops and certainly during aging, as we had shown before.

So tremendous benefits from the athletic standpoint I think not the least of which is how rapidly one could come back from an injury and how well one would sustain an injury and get complete repair of the muscle, not to mention that for speed and strength events, one might not see the precipitous fall in performance that normally comes after age 30 even in a training athlete.

So this little bit was what I presented to the World Anti-Doping Association because they're quite concerned about how close we are of genetic engineering or enhancement of athletes actually cropping up in terms of international sporting events.

And you know, as I said to them, I think the real danger of that -- and this is just to acknowledge some of my colleagues -- the real danger of that is not that it's going to happen any time soon in this country because we're still going at a fairly slow rate of trying to just really assess the safety of some of these gene transfer techniques even for treating, you know, primary genetic diseases, rare diseases for which there are no treatments.

And so the availability of this sort of technology to an athlete in this country is not going to happen any time soon, but on the world stage, in a world where countries in the past have shown that they want their athletes to win no matter what and they will give them any experimental drug that might be performance enhancing no matter what the long-term consequences, one can imagine that with enough money you could put together a program to genetically engineer your athletes and do it in such a way, which is what one is really concerned about that it would be totally undetectable unless you were to remove tissue from that athlete. There would be nothing in the blood, no signature in the blood or the urine to indicate that the tissues had been genetically manipulated.

So this is their concern, certainly not a concern, I think, in this country in the short term, but maybe a concern on the world stage maybe even in the next decade.

Just to let you know where we're going a little bit, I alluded to the fact that, you know, we started trying to intervene in this growth and regeneration pathway for aging by driving IGF-1, but what I didn't mention is in the last few years it has become really clear that there are major inhibitors of this whole pathway that the muscle actively is producing to sort of keep it in check.

And one unresolved question and one we're looking at and probably other people are looking at is whether some of these components also could help drive the repair and aging if you could block them. Note: Check out J. Tidball's talk at the IABG 10 on " Mechanisms Regulating Muscle Wasting during Muscle Disuse or Aging".)And so you could imagine there the approach would be either to create a substance in the blood that would interfere with the action of this protein, which has been called myostatin, or you could even imagine a small molecule screen might pick up a selective inhibitor of this protein which is in the -- it's a TGF beta family member.

So this is a target I think you're going to see increasing interest from drug companies, and it may have application in aging. It may not, but it certainly probably does have application in such things as juvenile diabetes and maybe in some of the muscular dystrophies where interfering with the signaling of this protein might allow the muscle to rebuild itself better and stronger.

And that's going to be much easier to implement, and that certainly would be a performance enhancer for an athlete, and those drugs are being developed now, and the accessibility of an athlete to those sorts of drugs might end up in the same sorts of results as what I was showing you for the IGF-1 over-expression.

And certainly in the general population I think this could be used as an instant muscle builder, and the nice thing about a drug is you sort of take until you've got what you want, and then you stop taking it, and it doesn't drive the process indefinitely.

We're going into clinical trial in the next year or so with AAV targeted at a primary muscle disease, a deficiency in what is called the sarcoglycan complex, which causes a form of muscular dystrophy known as limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. These components are all small enough to fit easily into AAV, and so I think the first real clinical test of this virus for sort of directed at a primary muscle problem are going to be in the context of trying to repair this whole structure, which is deficient in limb-girdle muscular dystrophy.

And we'll learn a lot about how easy it's going to be to actually use this gene transfer vector in humans in the process of that, and it's actually a collaboration between myself and groups at Harvard and the NIH and the Généthon in France, which is funded by the French government and the French Muscular Dystrophy Association.

So we're planning to do multiple -- sort of coordinate trials in this country and in France on this disease with the idea of then moving on to other primary muscle diseases and perhaps even looking at the IGF-1 myostatin axis as a possible therapeutic that we could then bring to humans in a muscle disease setting.

So that's my background on what we're doing, and I'd be happy to answer questions about where it's going.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Thank you very much.

Bill May and Dan Foster.

DR. MAY: I betray my ignorance, but I was wondering whether indirectly it might make a contribution to the treatment of women with osteoporosis, both increasing muscle strength, allowing them to increase their engagement in weight exercise that decreases bone loss and protects also against falls because you've got greater stability and strength in the muscles.

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, I think that's a real possibility. I mean, the IGF-1 has a number of other advantages that I didn't show you data on, and one is that as the animals get older they're not only stronger, but they're leaner. Their body fat is much lower than a normal animal.

And also, the bone loss that the mice undergo seems to be prevented at least in the limb muscles that we've looked at, and we assume it's because they are loading the bones more because of the larger muscle strength, and that does prevent a significant amount, if not all, of the bone loss, at least in the leg muscles of the mice.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Dan Foster.

DR. FOSTER: That was a lovely presentation. I think you've already answered this because you said that if you used enhancement in humans that there was no marker. I was going to ask the question: is there any leakage of IGF-1 from the muscle into the blood? And if so, was this due to a movement from the leg into the liver?

The reason, if you have a persistent elevation of IGF-1, you know, you get a disease from that that's acromegaly, and I gather that there's no leakage and no blood contribution here.

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, That was part of the design. There are a number of different splice forms of IGF-1, some which lead to ready secretion into the blood and others which are the forms the tissues normally make for themselves, which cause sort of a co-up regulation of the binding proteins that trap the IGF-1 in the tissue.

So we can detect absolutely no elevation in the blood, which was part of the inherent design of what we were trying to do. So the issue would be, you know, we want to look at this in larger animal models obviously before we would try it in a human, and then try massive overdoses of the virus to make sure, you know, at what point we actually do run a danger of exceeding the muscle's ability to trap it and spill it into the blood because that would have a lot of negative consequences.

DR. FOSTER: I just want to ask one real quick technical question. IGF-1 has, you know, effects on -- anti-apoptotic effects. I mean, it's been used to limit infarcts and things of that sort. But it looks like -- I mean, this is just a programmed cell death, you know, a signal death apoptosis, just a signal to die, and probably some of the stuff that he's doing in his muscle for the extra exercise and everything is just apoptotic effects.

And so one of the question would be: do you think that's contributing at all? I mean, I think all of the hypertrophy and everything you thought is not going to make that a major effect.

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah. Well, we've looked at this in the context of disuse atrophy, where you immobilize the animal's leg either in a cast or in sort of a simulated sort of weightlessness, hind limb suspension. Anyway, you don't allow the animal to use the muscle.

And just like if you casted one of our muscles, the animal will lose half of the muscle mass in the order of a month.

The IGF-1 doesn't stop that at all, which is why we were interested in looking at it. So even though it's anti-apoptotic especially in the heart, there's actually in the case of muscle disuse, there's a dominant pathway that blocks IGF-1, that shuts it down so that it doesn't allow it to have its normal anti-apoptotic effect.

We're combining IGF-1 delivery with other mediators of that pathway in skeletal muscle to show that you can then stop all of the loss not just with aging, but if you impose disuse on top of aging, then nothing happens. But the IGF-1 itself is probably anti-apoptotic in certain injury situations, but not in a non-load bearing situation where apoptosis seems to be sort of the dominant pathway that causes that rapid loss of muscle, and IGF-1 is shut down.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Bill Hurlbut.

DR. HURLBUT: Well, I want to ask you since what we're really interested in here is not the technical questions of even a therapeutic approach but the ethical implications. I want to ask you a broad question about what you see as some of the medical or scientific down sides of this and whether this actually holds potential for being a technique that could be casually used.

What I'm thinking of here are you very quickly alluded to the concern that's been raised in other fronts in gene therapy. There may actually be germ line incorporation when it's not suspected.

Daniel's question about systemic effects, obviously you add something into the body and it's going to affect more than just itself, if not directly through diffusible or circulating agents, then maybe just in the allometry, if you will, of proportions. You increase the muscle mass and you've got to have the supporting ligaments and bones to deal with it and so forth.

And then, of course, there are questions of whether it interferes with apoptosis you might induce cancer and these kinds of things, and so what I'm asking you is basically the scientific medical side of this. Is it a realistic concern that this might end up being used by anybody who wasn't just out and out reckless?

DR. SWEENEY: Well, as I said, I think that the technical barriers to doing that are sufficient enough that that just couldn't be casually done in a country such as this where the regulations would prevent it, but I think the real danger of it happening would be precisely what we're seeing, a government sanctioned program in another country where the whole goal of it would be athletic enhancement for the international sports stage.

But what may be something that's more relevant and more of a risk is if, in fact, the pharmaceuticals end up developing drugs with the idea of using them for diabetes or even some of the milder muscular dystrophies that target, say myostatin, and those are accessible, then those drugs are probably going to have a lot of the same effects that I've talked about in terms of muscle.

But depending on how specific they are, they're going to have side effects as you're alluding to. I mean, there the side effects are a little different from IGF-1 side effects. Myostatin is a TGF beta family member, and all of the drugs that exist now probably are going to have some cross-reactivity with the other family members, which will interfere with immune function and a number of other critical functions.

And so, you know, those are going to have to be very tightly regulated substances because, again, someone wanting the muscle enhancing actions could abuse it to the point where just like with anabolic steroids or growth hormone or anything else, you induce side effects.

Now, with the sort of genetic delivery of IGF-1, as I said, we tried to engineer safeguards against some of the issues you've raised in terms of trying to keep it out of the blood. In terms of if a cell that we had transduced became cancerous, the IGF-1 would be shut down immediately because the promoter that's controlling it is only differentiated muscle promoter.

So if the cell transformed, they would shut down. Now, that's different. What is possible is if there were a tumor in the tissue where there were high levels of IGF-1 in the tissue, then it might help the growth of the tumor to some extent, but the levels I'm talking about in the tissue are not 100-fold higher than normal. They are just several-fold, and so this is still, I think -- I think the tumorigenesis aspects are at low risk.

I think the highest risk in this setting would be if we started spilling high levels of IGF-1 into the blood.

DR. HURLBUT: You haven't seen any insertional mutagenesis or anything like that?

And, by the way, I want to ask you also: have you seen an increase in longevity of these mice?

DR. SWEENEY: We've seen a slight increase in longevity, and it's small enough that we haven't got enough animals yet to make it statistically significant, but it might be ten percent or so at the end of the day.

I mean, it appears to us they are living a bit longer, but as I say, because it's a small effect, we haven't had a large enough number.

DR. HURLBUT: So is basically your answer that, to sum it up, you see this as a therapeutic agent in the face of a difficulty, but it would otherwise be very reckless at least in the near term and maybe even in the long term to do this kind of thing?

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah. Well, how reckless it is is going to have to be determined by a lot of safety testing that has yet to be done, and so it's difficult for me to see how reckless it would be in the long term.

I mean, my personal bias is that the general approach, if it can be technically made more -- if it can be done more easily, I think would achieve our goal of in the aging population or in a dystrophic population of in one case improving quality of life and in the other case extending life.

And I think the potential side effects are minimal. The possibility of germ line transmission with the virus is there, although it's a very low probability, and if you're trying to make it happen, you can show some germ line transmission, but in the way I would view it delivered in a therapeutic setting, I think the possibility of germ line transmission is near zero.

But that could change as the viruses are made more efficient to get into muscle. They also might be more efficient in getting into the germ line, and so, you know, the FDA is quite concerned about this, and so we're trying to evaluate with all of these new serotypes whether or not at the same time we've got something that's better for muscle we've also got a higher risk of that type of transmission, and the data is just not there yet to tell you.


CHAIRMAN KASS: Let me follow and then Janet.

If you think just about the question of aging and the muscle degeneration, and leaving aside for the moment the question of the safety about which we don't know near enough, but why wouldn't one think of this not so much as species of enhancement as the species of prevention, and in principle, I mean, just to think it through, why isn't this something that one would be thinking that this fit for everybody long term?

DR. SWEENEY: Well, --

CHAIRMAN KASS: In other words, as a preventive measure to be given to people who are 30 years old?

DR. SWEENEY: I mean, and that was sort of our original thinking until it became clear that also, you know, it's also an enhancer. It not only prevents, but it allows you to be stronger and the muscles healthier than they would have been otherwise.

But, you know, if you take it away from the athletic context, which sort of muddies the whole thing, then I think of it -- I do think of it as a preventative measure. I think if the level of safety was absolutely demonstrable that there was zero risk, then I think every person would want to be treated in this way when they're young enough so that, you know, you would never lose muscle function as you got old, I mean, assuming that you could show that there was no down side to it.

At least from my limited viewpoint, I would see it that way, and this is what I had said and actually the popular press article that I gave you. I think if we come to a point where there's no safety issue at all and no specter of germ line transmission or anything else and all you get out of it is you stay strong as you get old so that you can get around and have a better quality of life, it would be hard for me to believe that that wouldn't then gain acceptance.

And when that gains acceptance in the population in general, then, you know, the athletic government agencies are just going to have to deal with it because whatever enhancement it provides to those athletes the public is not going to care about.


CHAIRMAN KASS: Michael.

PROF. SANDEL: Just on that, so if you give it as prevention when someone is 30, does that have the effect of preventing the deterioration of muscle function as they age, or does it bump up where they were before they got their shot at 30 and then keep them at a certain level?

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah. Well, what we've seen in the animals, because we've looked at this, is if you inject them at a point where they're no longer growing at all, they've just leveled off like we would be at 30 or 40 or whatever, if they do nothing, then they don't gain any muscle, but if they exercise at all, they gain a lot more. They start to gain a lot of muscle.

So if you absolutely restrict them so that they really can't do much of anything except sit in their cage, then they get no gain, but they get proportionally more gain the more they're allowed to exercise.

So you know, just a Weekend Warrior could get tremendous gains probably, you know, beyond just not losing muscle. But if they are sedentary and you really restrict them, the answer is that they keep the muscle mass they had the day you injected them and don't go down from there.

But, in fact, if you inject them when they're really old, when they've lost a lot of muscle mass and also don't allow them any exercise, they won't go back up. They'll just stay where they were the day you inject them. They won't go down anymore.

But combining it with exercise, you can really then bump up and get an enhancement.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Janet.

DR. ROWLEY: I'd just like to go back to some more technical questions, and particularly because in your article you did all of this by injecting into the muscles, whereas you also describe research where you did it systemically.

And I'm curious, again, sort of following on with some of Dan's questions as well as Bill's. When you do inject it systemically, particularly in terms of the virus, you're saying that it homes preferentially to skeletal muscle.

So how long does it take to clear the blood? And does some of the virus really go to the liver?

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, I know that --

DR. ROWLEY: And have systemic effects?

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, well, now, the liver is the other organ that has a high tropism for this virus. So quite a bit of the virus will go to the liver. None of it will express IGF-1 because the liver can't turn it on.

DR. ROWLEY: Okay. So it's a muscle specific promoter.

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah. So that you can show that the genetic material is in the liver, but it's dormant. There's no way for the liver to activate it.

DR. ROWLEY: Okay. And just looking ahead, you were saying that some of the -- you were thinking of using stem cells from bone marrow as vectors and having them home to the muscle.

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, they will home preferentially to injured tissue. So if it's a primary muscle disease that's ongoing, they will home to the muscle under those conditions.

DR. ROWLEY: But then that wouldn't be an aging strategy, though you can say aging people have injured muscles. So that --

DR. SWEENEY: No, no. We were thinking of that as more of a way to get delivery, widespread delivery in a dystrophy background, although you can also get the cells to home to the muscle if you exercise the muscles hard enough to induce injury.

So if you run the animals hard on a treadmill for a while, then inject them, the muscles that they've been using and in doing low level damage to is where the stem cells will then home.

DR. ROWLEY: Thank you.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Gil.

PROF. MEILAENDER: I have to really show my ignorance here, but do rodents as they age show signs of dementia? That's something that we would --

DR. SWEENEY: Actually I don't know.

Do they?

PROF. MEILAENDER: I mean, I was just wondering in terms of what you had said before, which at one level makes sense to me. The issue was, you know, if you solve the safety questions, then it would be hard to know why any of us wouldn't want this just so that we'd be healthier, stronger, and less prone to debilitating injury as we aged.

And that made sense to me, but then I started to think about being so vigorous forever as I was demented.


#9 kevin

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Posted 10 November 2003 - 07:13 AM

Continued from the previous post

PROF. DRESSER: I just wondered how elaborate a process it is to produce this. I mean, say, for the sake of argument, everybody does want this. I know you can't predict the price, but is it time intensive to prepare or what?

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, I mean, the technology to produce it today is certainly not the technology that we would be using by the time we've dealt with all of these issues. I mean, it's gotten to do -- I mean, to do these studies that I've talked about or even to do the dog studies, to treat the legs of a dog would cost a few thousand dollars at this point, but this is with technology that's far from optimized. This is laboratory technology, not scaled up technology.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Now, I'd like to raise a question that won't get any sympathy, but this is in a way the opposite of your question, Gil, where you're talking about the failure of the coordination of the aging of different systems, about which I know a vast collection of jokes, but I will spare you those.

But what's in a way at stake in this is something like the view of the life cycle and, forgive me, but a place of decline in the overall shape of a life, and while nobody from a medical point of view or even from an experiential point of view would choose debility, given the opportunity to avoid it, one at least has to wonder what the world would be like if you've got 75 year old men quite happily playing ice hockey and what the view of the life cycle would be if in a way what you really are aiming for -- never mind the immortality research -- but you're going to get everybody up to the brick wall sort of looking and acting as if they were 30.

And on that subject I promised Michael Sandel this, but there's a wonderful passage from Montaigne which I'd like to put in the record. Let me read this.

The question really was for those people who don't want to add years to life but life to years, of which this would be a great benefit.

All of us, I think, would want this, but the question is whether or not death would become even more of an affront and whether in some ways the fear and loathing of death would be on the increase in the absence of these signs of decline. And here is Montaigne's passage.

Note: WARNING: THE PASSAGE BELOW IS NOT FIT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

"I notice that in proportion as I sink into sickness I naturally enter into a certain disdain for life. I find that I have much more trouble digesting this resolution when I am in health than when I have a fever. Inasmuch as I no longer cling so hard to the good things of life when I begin to lose the use and pleasure of them, I come to view death with much less frightened eyes. This makes me hope that the farther I get from life and the nearer to death the more easily I shall accept the exchange.

"If we fell into such an exchange, namely, decrepitude, suddenly, I don't think we could endure it. But when we are led by nature's hand down a gentle and virtually imperceptible slope bit by bit, one step at a time, she rolls us into this wretched state and makes us familiar with it so that we find no shock when youth dies within us, which in essence and in truth is a harder death than the complete death of a languishing life or the death of old age inasmuch as the leap is not so cruel from a painful life as from a sweet and flourishing life to a grievous and painful one."


Now, that is in a way an existential question about how one looks at one's finitude, if one has no intimations of the mortality in decline, and then there's the sort of further sort of social question of what the world is going to look like if, in addition to our cultivation of youth in which all kinds of people are not acting their age, they would now have no reason to act their age because they would, in fact, be in many decisive respects indistinguishable from what we all are when we're 30.

I'm not --

DR. SWEENEY: Well, these mice still look old. They just don't look weak. [lol]

(Laughter.)

CHAIRMAN KASS: I believe we've got botox.

DR. SWEENEY: So much for Montaigne.

DR. FOSTER: Leon, I'm not sure that I agree with that. I think most people in medicine say that what they would like to do is to die suddenly with an intact mind, you know, healthy and with an intact mind. So that the lingering death that makes it maybe more wishful, I'm not sure that you'd be more afraid of this because most of us think that a sudden, you know, a Johnny Unitas death dying on the exercise thing is maybe the most blessed way one could go.

I don't know whether I buy into this --

CHAIRMAN KASS: I shouldn't be telling you that the Book of Common Prayer, if I'm not mistaken, asks that one should be delivered from sudden death for reasons which the gentleman at the end of the table --

DR. MAY: Sudden and unprovided for death.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Okay, but I wasn't introducing this as an objection to this, seriously.

DR. SWEENEY: No, I think you'd probably be outvoted by the population in general.

CHAIRMAN KASS: But it seems to me that this is one of those things which at first blush looks from a public health standpoint absolutely attractive, and yet it can't help but have all kinds of consequences for the perception of the life cycle and also for the relation amongst the generations even if us guys are a little more wrinkled than we were when we were 30.

That's not a moral objection that is going to stand, but I think one shouldn't underestimate the degree to which a change like this, if it became safe and if it became used would probably have profound consequences senility or no senility. The self-perception of oneself in an aging body is somehow part of our experience.

And if the body's aging which is mostly experienced by the fact that this damned equipment doesn't do what the will wants it to do and it used to do perfectly happy, I can't slide into second base anymore, though I still would like to do that; then it seems to me the feeling of a life would be different.

I'm not saying worse. It might be much better, but this is not a trivial matter about which you're speaking. It's not simply a public health matter. That was the point.


DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, perhaps I've sat out on this for a couple of reasons, personal, members of my family which were not so happily resigned to their loss of ambulation and basically lost their will to live because of it.

And also, I'm not going quite so happily myself in terms of reduced function. So --


CHAIRMAN KASS: Neither am I.

Bill, and then I think we'll stop.

DR. FOSTER: In my family, my boys pump iron, you know, and when I walk into the room the greeting is, "Hey, atrophied arms," and so I think I'm going to call Dr. Sweeney up and see if I can't get a little help for these insulting sons of mine.

(Laughter.)

CHAIRMAN KASS: For how many years do you want to fight them?

Bill, and then we'll stop.

DR. HURLBUT: Well, that's a hard comment to follow because what I was going to say was not just with a feeling of life changed from within a person, but the feeling of the relationships toward that life would change.

I mean, I remember watching my own father go through significant muscle atrophy and taking on a whole new relationship with him as I helped him move, and that was a meaningful part of the end of my relationship with my father.


And so I think in a way the larger question comes overarching here. Is the world in some way good either by the benevolent purposes of a creator or by the harmonious balance of a subtle evolutionary force or both, or is it just that one function was preserved because it helped the organism leave its genes in the next generation?

And it seems to me that's a crucial question because when I think about what you're talking about, the first thing that comes to my mind is IGF-1 does many, many things in the body, and you can't just go around tinkering with one thing and not damage a lot of things.

And that's the standard objection to these exaggerated projections mostly in popular magazines of the future of genetic engineering. People don't appreciate how complexly intertwined all of the genetic functions actually are.

We had pleiotropy and polygenic inheritance on the first level and then much more complex regulations and so forth. So if you change one thing, you're going to change many things.

But what you're suggesting raises a bit of an exception to that. You're suggesting that by targeting you can actually do a spatial and temporal modularization of a life reality, one that a more complex, overarching genetic system couldn't itself do.

So you're really suggesting there might be a way to bypass the multiple effects and possibly contain this. I mean, I know that you didn't overstate it.

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah.

DR. HURLBUT: You said the risks simply -- but this is the point. The question then becomes --

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah. That's the conceptual advantage of it.

DR. HURLBUT: The question then becomes: is the world right the way it was made or can we basically go in and alter the blueprint of the thing with a later revision of it?

That seems to me what the question comes down to. Is there some human benefit beyond an obvious therapeutic benefit to interfering in the way natural life unfolds?

DR. SWEENEY: Yeah, I guess it comes to a more philosophical issue. Was the aging process by design or simply neglect?

DR. HURLBUT: That's it.

DR. SWEENEY: I mean, is it a designed process or is it just the lack of forethought at a time in life when you're no longer contributing to the propagation of life?

And so we've sort of -- intellectually, from a scientific standpoint, I got at it that, well, this just wasn't thought through properly, and we can fix some of the things that could be tweaked a little bit to improve the long-term survival and performance of the tissue. Just addressing it strictly scientifically, not philosophically or morally, that's sort of the approach we're looking at, which is why the ability of gene transfer to give you modularization of the effect is so important to the type of thinking, because then you can think about affecting one type of tissue and not affecting the body as a whole
.

DR. HURLBUT: Have you heard the saying Mother Nature always bats in the bottom of the ninth?

CHAIRMAN KASS: You should have the last word, I mean, if you'd like.

DR. SWEENEY: Well, again, I think it's whether or not Mother Nature designed the aging process or really just it's a fallout of not caring about the process.

CHAIRMAN KASS: Yes. I want to thank Dr. Sweeney for a very, very interesting and stimulating presentation.

I also want to thank you for your willingness to, not only on this occasion but on other occasions, alert people to the kinds of ethical and philosophical questions that your work raises and to lead us up to the edge of that and to entertain them and to do so in as thoughtful a way as you have.

So thank you very much. You've been a real service to the Council.

Thank you all. I will try to be in touch with you. I assume from some of the reports filtering back that some of you want to tell me things about yesterday. E-mails are, of course, welcome, phone calls too, and I'll be trying to get in touch with you in the meantime to talk about what's coming next.

Thanks for your participation. Safe trip home, and see you soon.

(Whereupon, at 12:11 p.m., the meeting was concluded.)

#10 Cyto

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Posted 24 November 2003 - 08:18 AM

whoops, my bad. habbit.
----------------------------------
REPAIR
The regeneration game

Heather Wood

T he poor regenerative capacity of axons in the central nervous system (CNS) is still a serious obstacle to CNS repair. However, two new studies published in Neuron, by Qiu et al. and Neumann et al., indicate that a solution to this problem might come from studying how dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons respond to peripheral damage.

The primary sensory neurons of the DRG have axonal branches in both the peripheral nervous system and the spinal cord. But whereas the peripheral branch can regenerate after injury, the central branch cannot. Intriguingly, however, if the peripheral branch is lesioned first, the regenerative capacity of the central branch is increased considerably. The authors of these studies reasoned that if they could identify the signalling pathways that are activated by this so-called 'conditioning lesion', they might be able to mimic its effects without causing further damage.

It was previously shown that raising the levels of cyclic AMP signalling in CNS neurons allows them to grow on myelin, which normally inhibits their growth. Qiu et al. showed that cAMP levels were raised in DRG neurons in response to a peripheral lesion, so they asked whether cAMP signalling was required for the conditioning effect. They found that, in the presence of a cAMP inhibitor, a peripheral lesion could no longer stimulate central axonal growth, providing strong evidence that the conditioning response is mediated by cAMP signalling.

Could cAMP signalling mimic the effects of a peripheral lesion on central axonal regeneration? Both teams increased the level of cAMP signalling in primary sensory neurons by injecting a cAMP analogue into the DRG, where the cell bodies of these neurons are located. They found that this treatment did indeed cause central axons to regenerate in the absence of a peripheral lesion. In addition, Neumann et al. showed that this treatment has a dual effect — it not only helps the axon to overcome the inhibitory effects of myelin, but also increases its intrinsic capacity for growth.

So, the conditioning effect of a peripheral lesion can be reproduced by stimulating cAMP signalling in the DRG. The fact that this intervention can be carried out at the level of the cell body means that it is not necessary to inflict further trauma on the site of injury, raising the possibility that it could lead to a viable clinical treatment for spinal cord damage. At a more fundamental level, it will also be interesting to elucidate the molecular basis of the asymmetrical response of DRG neuronal processes to injury.
Source Here

#11 Cyto

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Posted 28 November 2003 - 10:43 PM

I think this would be a place to put this interesting article, I was quite surprised.
_______________________________________________________________________

Control of orientation of rat Schwann cells using an 8-T static magnetic field

Yawara Eguchi, Mari Ogiue-Ikeda and Shoogo Ueno,
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan
Received 20 May 2003; revised 4 June 2003; accepted 9 June 2003. ; Available online 23 September 2003.


Abstract
Schwann cells aid in neuronal regeneration in the peripheral nervous system via guiding the regrowth of axons. In this study, we investigated the magnetic orientation of Schwann cells, and of a mixture of Schwann cells and collagen, after an 8-tesla magnetic field exposure. We obtained cultured Schwann cells from dissected sciatic nerves of neonatal rats. After 60 h of magnetic field exposure, Schwann cells oriented parallel to the magnetic fields. In contrast, the mixture of Schwann cells and collagen, Schwann cells oriented in the direction perpendicular to the magnetic field after 2 h of magnetic field exposure. In this case, Schwann cells aligned along the collagen fiber oriented by magnetic fields. The magnetic control of Schwann cell alignment is useful in medical engineering applications such as nerve regeneration.

Author Keywords: Static magnetic field; Magnetic orientation; Magnetically aligned collagen; Schwann cell; Wallerian degeneration; Nerve regeneration
Copyright © 2003 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
Neuroscience Letters

#12 Cyto

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Posted 29 November 2003 - 07:54 PM

Monkey test offers hope to paralysed

Scientists in Switzerland have successfully regenerated nerve fibres in the damaged spinal cords of monkeys.

The result paves the way for human trials for spinal cord regeneration, which could begin next year.

The treated monkeys, which had suffered paralysis in one hand, regained 80 per cent of the movement they had lost.

Up to 12 months of further study is needed to confirm these results and, in particular, to see if there are any serious side effects.

“This is one more step on a very long road,” cautioned Eric Rouiller, professor of neurophysiology at Fribourg University.

“If we can get this confirmation in primates, this will be an important step.”

In Switzerland alone, 2,200 people have spinal cord injuries and about 180 new cases are registered every year.

Growth blockers
The latest experiments follow 15 years of pioneering work by neuroscientist Martin Schwab at the University of Zurich.

For centuries, doctors considered that a damaged spinal cord could not be repaired.

Then in 1988, Schwab identified a substance in the central nervous system, which prevents the brain and spinal cord from repairing themselves after an injury.

Dubbed Nogo because of its inhibiting effect, the gene produces a protein, which prevents damaged nerves from re-growing after they are cut.

His team subsequently developed an antibody that neutralises the blocking protein and allows the nerves to reconnect.

Researchers partially cut the spinal cords of rats, paralysing the animals, then gave them the antibody.

The nerves re-grew and the animals resumed normal activities such as grabbing food pellets and climbing a rope.

Manual dexterity
In this new study, the monkeys were trained to open drawers that were held with a spring, extract raisins from slits in a board using their thumb and index finger, or catch food that they were thrown.

After their spinal cords had been partially cut, the animals were unable to use one of their hands.

Treatment with the antibodies restored a high degree of manual dexterity.

“In the monkeys which have these Nogo antibodies, we find a recovery of hand function to a really amazing degree,” Schwab told swissinfo. “It’s about 80 per cent of the original function that comes back.”

“They open drawers. They pull out raisins quickly with high precision. They catch food almost like a normal monkey.”

Their performance was in marked contrast to that of untreated animals.

Partial recovery
Wary of raising hopes in human patients, the scientists point out that this recovery was achieved in monkeys whose spinal cord had only been partially severed.

Moreover, studies in rats have shown that the scientists have to begin treatment within two days for it to be effective.

“A major spinal cord injury creates a large destruction zone,” said Schwab. “I sometimes compare it to a bomb which goes off in a computer centre and a full repair back to completely normal is probably not even something for the distant future.”

Schwab says the realistic hope would be to help paraplegic patients achieve some movement – probably with crutches or handrails – as well as restore bladder control.

“These are functions which are relatively crude and do not require an enormous number of nerve fibres and there we see very good recovery in the animal models,” said Schwab.

Scientists believe that a multi-therapy approach involving a Nogo blocker, an agent to boost nerve growth, and some kind of cell transplant will eventually be available for treatment of severe paralysis.

In the United States, paralysed rats have been able to walk again after researchers transplanted stem cells into their spinal cords.

swissinfo, Vincent Landon

Copyright © Swissinfo / Neue Zürcher Zeitung AG




REPAIR
No Nogo — grow/no grow?
Nature Reviews Neuroscience 4, 429 (2003); doi:10.1038/nrn1135

Rachel Jones

Nogo is a myelin-associated protein that is expressed in the central, but not the peripheral, nervous system, and is thought to be partly responsible for the inability of central axons to regrow after injury. But three studies of Nogo-knockout mice published in Neuron, rather than clarifying the role of Nogo in preventing regeneration, have confused matters by finding different phenotypes.

Evidence from several studies has led to the view that Nogo, with other myelin-associated proteins, inhibits outgrowth of axons. Perhaps if this inhibition could be blocked or removed, injured axons in the central nervous system could regenerate. Three groups have generated mice that lack one, two or all three isoforms of Nogo, to see whether these mice show improved regeneration of central axons.

Nogo-A is the main isoform found in oligodendrocytes, so it has attracted the most attention in studies of regeneration. The first study, by Kim et al., used mice with a mutation that prevents expression of Nogo-A and B. After spinal cord injury in young adult mice, they found that the knockout mice showed increased sprouting of corticospinal axons and also improvements in motor function — a promising result.

The second study, by Simonen and colleagues, used a Nogo-A knockout mouse and found a smaller increase in axonal growth. By contrast, Zheng et al. found that neither a Nogo-A/B mutant nor a Nogo-A/B/C mutant mouse showed any improvement in axonal regeneration or sprouting after spinal cord injury.

There is no obvious explanation for the difference in results. Although Kim et al. found that sprouting was greatest in young Nogo-A/B knockout mice, rather than older adults, the mice used by Zheng and colleagues were also young. The fact that Nogo-A knockout mice show a smaller increase in sprouting than the Nogo-A/B knockouts used by Kim and colleagues could be due to a compensatory increase in Nogo-B expression following the Nogo-A mutation but the lack of regeneration in the mice used by Zheng et al. is puzzling. Clearly, much more work is needed before we will understand the role of Nogo in preventing regeneration; and a good starting point will be to find the reasons for the different phenotypes seen in these studies.

#13 Cyto

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Posted 24 December 2003 - 09:32 AM

A time code for myelin

By Heather Wood

Combinatorial codes are a recurring theme in neural development — a Hox gene code specifies different cell types along the anteroposterior axis of the neural tube, and distinct combinations of transcription factors determine neuronal fate along the dorsoventral axis. Now, in the Journal of Neuroscience, Farhadi et al. describe a new combinatorial code that temporally controls the expression of a single gene. They show that glia use different combinations of regulatory sequences to control the expression of myelin basic protein (MBP) at various stages during and after the onset of myelination.

Farhadi et al. examined the region upstream of the MBP coding sequence, and they identified four regulatory modules — M1–M4 — that are conserved between mice and humans. The authors made DNA constructs in which various combinations of regulatory elements were linked to a reporter gene. These reporter constructs were inserted in single copy into the mouse genome using a controlled transgenesis strategy that allowed direct comparisons of both qualitative and quantitative expression phenotypes.

In the central nervous system, Farhadi et al. showed that M1 and M2 upregulated reporter gene expression in oligodendrocytes in the early postnatal period during primary myelination. M3, on the other hand, drove continuous reporter expression throughout primary myelination and adulthood, and the authors proposed that M3 is required for myelin maintenance. M3 also seems to be required during myelin repair in the CNS after a demyelinating injury. In the peripheral nervous system, both myelinating and remyelinating Schwann cells used elements within M3 and M4 to drive reporter gene expression.

These findings indicate that different phases in myelin development and maintenance are characterized by the use of different combinations of regulatory elements to control MBP expression. By finding out which factors bind to these elements, it should be possible to identify the upstream signalling pathways that control myelination and remyelination. This could have important implications for myelin repair. Remyelination in the injured adult nervous system produces comparatively thin myelin sheaths, and this tends to limit the degree of functional recovery. If the signalling pathways that promote robust myelination can be identified and harnessed, this problem might be overcome.

#14 kevin

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Posted 31 December 2003 - 09:34 AM

Link: http://www.wired.com...tw=wn_tophead_3
Date: 12-30-03
Source: Wired.com



It seems that hair regeneration isn't just about getting peoples bald spots covered...

Stenn shows me around the facilities, which are so new that a yellow Post-it marked aderans is all that labels the front door. As we walk, he tells me that growing a hair is as complex as growing a limb. It turns out that the molecules responsible for telling a hair to grow belong to the same family of molecules that tell limbs, kidneys, and livers to grow. The techniques that Stenn develops to "turn on" a follicle could one day help amputees grow back limbs. "People may not think much of us because we're working with hair," Stenn says. "But we are in the vanguard of organ regeneration."

This is the source of all that Nobel talk. "This research will change the world, not just your hair," Washenik says. He also notes the work of Jahoda, the British hair researcher, who last year used a hair stem cell to create blood cells. In other words, hair has already been used to generate other distinct human cells. "Hair is the perfect model for organ regeneration," says Cheng-Ming Chuong, an organ regeneration specialist at the University of Southern California who has begun talking with Stenn about ancillary applications for his research. Unlike other parts of the body, Chuong explains, hair naturally regenerates. "If Stenn can figure out exactly what turns those cells into follicles," he says, "it will have reverberations throughout the field of tissue engineering."



#15 kevin

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Posted 31 January 2004 - 02:34 AM

Link: http://www.breakthro...one&id=105&op=t
Date: Jan 23, 2004

Scientists grow neurons using nanostructures
01-23-2004 -- Northwestern University
Scientists at Northwestern University have designed synthetic molecules that promote neuron growth, a promising development that could lead to the reversal of paralysis due to spinal cord injury.

"We have created new materials that because of their chemical structure interact with cells of the central nervous system in ways that may help prevent the formation of the scar that is often linked to paralysis after spinal cord injury," said Samuel I. Stupp, Board of Trustees Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Chemistry and Medicine.

Similar to earlier experiments that promoted bone growth, the scientists now have successfully grown nerve cells using an artificial three-dimensional network of nanofibers, an important technique in regenerative medicine. The results will be published online Jan. 22 by the journal Science.

"We have shown that our scaffold selectively and rapidly directs cell differentiation, driving neural progenitor cells to become neurons and not astrocytes," said Stupp, who led the research team in Evanston. "Astrocytes are a major problem in spinal cord injury because they lead to scarring and act as a barrier to neuron repair."

The innovative scaffold is made up of nanofibers formed by peptide amphiphile molecules. The scientists' key breakthrough was designing the peptide amphiphiles so that when they self-assembled into the scaffold a specific sequence of five amino acids known to promote neuron growth were presented in enormous density on the outer surfaces.

"This was all done by design," said Stupp, who is also director of the University's Institute for Bioengineering and Nanoscience in Advanced Medicine. "By including a specific biological signal on the nanostructure we were able to customize the new materials for neurons."

In collaboration with the lab of John A. Kessler, Benjamin and Virginia T. Boshes Professor of Neurology at the Feinberg School of Medicine, Stupp and his team observed that when the peptide amphiphiles were placed in solution and combined with neural progenitor cells (which are present in the central nervous system and able to differentiate into different types of cells) the nanofiber scaffolds formed and led quickly to the selective differentiation of the cells into neurons.

In subsequent experiments, the researchers successfully delivered the peptide amphiphile solution, using a simple injection, to the site of a spinal cord injury in a laboratory rat. Upon contact with the tissue, the solution was transformed into a solid scaffold.

In addition to Stupp and Kessler, other authors on the Science paper are Gabriel A. Silva and Catherine Czeisler (lead authors), Krista L. Niece, Elia Beniash and Daniel Harrington, all from Northwestern University. The research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Energy.

#16 kevin

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Posted 01 February 2004 - 07:57 AM

Link: http://www.the-scien...nt2_040202.html
Date: Feb 2, 2004

5-Prime | Regeneration, the Great Comeback

Posted ImageWhich animals can regenerate? This ability is widespread in the animal kingdom, but its distribution is spotty. Salamanders are the best-known regenerators, but cockroaches can regrow legs, Drosophila can renew imaginal discs, deer regain antlers, and humans can regenerate fingertips, if the wound is not sutured.

What do regenerating systems have in common? In such systems a wound forms a blastema, a recognizable clump of proliferating cells that gives rise to the new structure. The distal tip of the new structure is made first, and then the middle part is filled in.

Regenerating systems always make the correct structures. For example, says Sue Bryant of the University of California in Irvine, planarian can be cut into 280 bits; each bit can regenerate a new body that is spatially appropriate to the starter. Researchers think that regeneration is divided into at least two phases: an early one that is poorly understood, and a later stage that seems to mirror very closely (if not exactly) embryonic development, says David Gardiner, also of UC-Irvine.

What differences exist between regenerators and nonregenerators, or poor regenerators? Research-ers aren't sure, but they have some hypotheses. Some think that regenerators have weaker immune systems than nonregenerating animals, while others sense that regenerators have this ability because they don't form scars. Some researchers posit that different evolutionary pressures may explain the distribution of regenerators and their varying abilities.

Will humans regrow more than their fingertips in the future? Many researchers think so. For example, mammalian cloning has shown that adult cells retain the ability to return to development, as likely would be required for regrowth. Furthermore, while mice do not normally regenerate their hearts, a murine strain (MRL) was recently discovered that can do so, demonstrating that mammals can be altered to improve their regenerative ability.1

What are the big, outstanding questions? Researchers want to know what causes regenerating organisms to form a blastema, instead of forming a scar. "How does it start?" asks Steve Johnson of the University of Wisconsin. In addition, they'd love to find a Holy Grail factor that induces regrowth in nonregenerating systems.

--Mignon Fogarty

1. J.M. Leferovich et al., "Heart regeneration in adult MRL mice," Proc Natl Acad Sci, 98:9830-5, 2001.

#17 kevin

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Posted 18 February 2004 - 06:17 AM

Link: http://www.eurekaler...w-scf021704.php

Public release date: 17-Feb-2004
Contact: Walter Neary
wneary@u.washington.edu
206-685-3841
University of Washington


Stem cells found in adults may repair nerves
It used to be considered dogma that a nerve, once injured, could never be repaired. Now, researchers have learned that some nerves, even nerves in parts of the brain, can regenerate or be replaced. By studying the chemical signals that encourage or impede the repair of nerves, researchers at the University of Washington, the Salk Institute, and other institutions may contribute to eventual treatments for injured spines and diseased retinas, according to a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

Much of this research focuses on stem cells, one of several types of general cells that can give rise to specialized cells, like neurons. It was once thought that human stem cells were only found in embryos, and in bone marrow, where they produce blood cells. But stem cells are also being found in adults, including the brain and the eye. For example, stems cells steadily replace dead neurons in the olfactory bulb, which transmits scent signals to the brain, and the hippocampal dentate gyrus, an area that organizes short-term memory.

However, the pace of stem-cell repairs in humans is slow. And in some cases, stem cells can even impede healing. Stem cells in an injured spinal cord can create a sticky scar that blocks nerve regeneration, according to Dr. Philip Horner, an assistant professor in the Department of Neurosurgery in the UW School of Medicine.

"We've found that the axons, the parts of the nerves that transmit signals, try to regenerate after an injury but get caught in the scar. It's like they're stuck in the mud," Horner said. "We're studying ways that this process is regulated to see if it can be manipulated to promote healing. In other words, we're looking at ways to get the axons out of the mud. One way is to make the mud less sticky by manipulating stem cells that participate in scar formation. Another is to stimulate the axons to push through the scar by providing the cut nerves with molecules that induce elongation. We're using molecular signals called growth factors to simulate the growth of cultured nerve cells in the laboratory."

Horner and Dr. Thomas Reh, professor in the UW Department of Biological Structure, will join Dr. Fred Gage from the Salk Institute for a 12:30 p.m. session Feb. 16 on "Neural Stem Cells in Health and Disease" at the AAAS's annual meeting in Seattle. Gage will present an overview of neural stem cells, Horner will discuss stem cells and the repair of the spinal cord, and Reh will focus on stem cells in the eye.

The same types of cells that create scar tissue in the spinal column can create new cells in the retina of the eye, especially in young animals of some species, according to Reh. The retina is a delicate light-sensitive membrane that transmits light signals to the brain. Many eyes diseases that cause blindness, such as glaucoma and as age-related-macular-regeneration, damage the retina.

Salamanders don't get glaucoma because they can readily regenerate retinal cells. The same is true of newts, frogs, and some types of fish. "We're trying to understand the remarkable regenerative powers of these lower vertebrates, and through this understanding, develop strategies to stimulate regeneration in the human retina," Reh said.

While salamanders can regenerate retinal cells through their life, many other species lose this ability as they age. "At some point in each species life cycle, the stem cells in the retina make a transition from a regenerative cell to a cell that will make a scar in response to injury, like the cells that cause scars in the spinal cord," Reh said. "Chickens make the transition a few weeks after hatching in most of their retina, though they retain some limited capacity to regenerate retinal cells throughout life. In rats, it's only a matter of a few days after the cells are generated that they lose their ability to regenerate other retinal cells."

Human retinas seemingly can't repair themselves, yet in recent studies human retinal cells have grown new neurons when cultured in the laboratory. "The hope is that many of the molecular and cellular mechanisms necessary for regeneration, that serve amphibians so well, are still in place in humans," Reh said. "Future studies from the nervous system, as well as other organ systems, should enable us to define the roadblocks in the regenerative process, and develop strategies to go around them."


###


additional references :
Discussion on Horner's research: http://www.asia-spin...damagedcord.php
Info on Horner: http://www.depts.was...mcrt/horner.htm
and his lab: http://depts.washing...rch/horner.html

#18 kevin

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Posted 18 February 2004 - 06:58 AM

Link: http://www.eurekaler...b-kar021604.php
Public release date: 17-Feb-2004
Contact: Aaron Patnode
aaron.patnode@childrens.harvard.edu
617-355-5337
Children's Hospital Boston



Key advance reported in regenerating nerve fibers
Two-pronged approach synergizes growth
BOSTON -- Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School have advanced a decades-old quest to get injured nerves to regenerate. By combining two strategies – activating nerve cells' natural growth state and using gene therapy to mute the effects of growth-inhibiting factors – they achieved about three times more regeneration of nerve fibers than previously attained.
The study involved the optic nerve, which connects nerve cells in the retina with visual centers in the brain, but the Children's team has already begun to extend the approach to nerves damaged by spinal cord injury, stroke, and certain neurodegenerative diseases. Results appear in the February 18th Journal of Neuroscience.

Normally, injured nerve fibers, known as axons, can't regenerate. Axons conduct impulses away from the body of the nerve cell, forming connections with other nerve cells or with muscles. One reason axons can't regenerate has been known for about 15 years: Several proteins in the myelin, an insulating sheath wrapped around the axons, strongly suppress growth. Over the past two years, researchers have developed techniques that disable the inhibitory action of myelin proteins, but this approach by itself has produced relatively little axon growth.

The Children's Hospital team, led by Dr. Larry Benowitz, director of Neuroscience Research, reasoned that blocking inhibition alone would be like trying to drive a car only by taking a foot off the brake. "Our idea was to step on the gas – to activate the growth state at the same time," Benowitz said. "Knocking out inhibitory molecules alone is not enough, because the nerve cells themselves are still in a sluggish state."

The researchers injured the optic nerves of rats, then used a two-pronged approach to get the axons to regenerate. To gas up the sluggish nerve cells, Dr. Dietmar Fischer, first author of the study, caused an inflammatory reaction by deliberately injuring the lens of the eye. Though seemingly harmful, this injury actually stimulates immune cells known as macrophages to travel to the site and release growth factors. As Benowitz's lab had found previously, these growth factors activated genes in the retinal nerve cells, causing new axons to grow into the optic nerve.

To try to enhance this growth, the researchers added a gene-therapy technique. Using a modified, non-infectious virus as a carrier, they transferred a gene developed by co-investigator Dr. Zhigang He into retinal nerve cells that effectively removed the "braking" action of the myelin proteins – spurring production of a molecule that sopped these inhibitory proteins up before they could block growth.

"When we combined these two therapies – activating the growth program in nerve cells and overcoming the inhibitory signaling – we got very dramatic regeneration," said Benowitz, who is also an associate professor of neurosurgery at Harvard Medical School and holds a Ph.D. in biology/psychobiology. The amount of axon regeneration wasn't enough to restore sight, but was about triple that achieved by stimulating growth factors alone, he said.

Benowitz's lab will continue working with the optic nerve in hopes of restoring vision. "We have to fine-tune the system, and we have some ideas of how to do it," Benowitz said. "But then we come to another big hurdle." That hurdle is getting the nerve fibers from the eye to hook up to the correct centers in the brain in such a way that visual images do not become scrambled. "It's a mapping problem," Benowitz said. "We have to retain the proper organization of fiber projections to the brain."

Meanwhile, he and his colleagues have begun using a similar two-pronged approach to regrow axons damaged by stroke or spinal-cord injury. They have already found a way to step on the gas – using a small molecule known as inosine to switch damaged nerve cells in the cerebral cortex into a growth state. In 2002, they reported that inosine helped stroke-impaired rats to regrow nerve connections between brain and spinal cord and partially recover motor function.

#19 kevin

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Posted 03 March 2004 - 02:56 AM

Link: http://news.bbc.co.u...lth/3495717.stm




Scientists 're-grow optic nerves'
Posted Image
Optic nerves link the eye to the brain and enable people to see

Scientists believe they have taken a big step forward in their effort to be able to repair damaged nerves.

Researchers at Harvard Medical School say they have had some success trying to regenerate optic nerves in rats.

Writing in the Journal of Neuroscience they said while they were unable to restore sight they achieved three times more regeneration compared to others.

Finding a way to re-grow nerves could lead to cures for a wide range of conditions from blindness to paralysis.

Permanent damage

Any injuries that cause damage to nerves tend to be permanent. This is because nerve cells cannot regenerate or repair themselves.

Scientists around the world are working on projects aimed at finding a way to get nerves to re-grow.

One of the reasons nerves are unable to regenerate is that proteins in the outer layer of nerve fibres are programmed to stop re-growth.

Scientists have developed ways to turn these proteins off. However, this has not proved enough to make nerves regenerate.

Dr Larry Benowitz and colleagues tried a two-pronged approach to try to stimulate re-growth.

First, they damaged the lens in the eyes of a group of rats with optic nerve damage. This nerve links the retina to the part of the brain that enables them to see.

Damaging the lens stimulates an immune response - cells travel to the eye and release growth factors to try to repair the damage. This causes nerve fibres to grow into the optic nerve.

Dr Benowitz then used a gene therapy technique to try to boost this growth by injecting a gene designed to turn the proteins that are programmed to stop re-growth off.

"When we combined these two therapies - activating the growth programme in nerve cells and overcoming the inhibitory signalling - we got very dramatic regeneration," said Dr Benowitz.

However, the scientists were unable to get the nerve fibres from the retina and those from the brain to hook up properly.

"It's a mapping problem," said Dr Benowitz. "We have to retain the proper organisation of fibre projections to the brain."

Further research

The scientists are now planning further studies to try to overcome this problem.

Kevin Shakesheff, professor of tissue engineering at the University of Nottingham, said scientists were still years away from being able to use these techniques in humans.

"There has been a lot of progress in this area," he told BBC News Online.

"We have taken enough steps forward to indicate we can solve the problem. The science is really exciting.

"However, translating that excitement into clinical applications will take time."

#20 Cyto

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Posted 29 March 2004 - 05:14 AM

Self-assembling proteins could help repair human tissue

Johns Hopkins University researchers have created a new class of artificial proteins that can assemble themselves into a gel and encourage the growth of selected cell types. This biomaterial, which can be tailored to send different biological signals to cells, is expected to help scientists who are developing new ways to repair injured or diseased body parts.
"We're trying to give an important new tool to tissue engineers to help them do their work more quickly and efficiently," said James L. Harden, whose lab team developed the new biomaterial. "We're the first to produce a self-assembling protein gel that can present several different biological signals to stimulate the growth of cells."

Harden, an assistant professor in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, reported on his work March 28 in Anaheim, Calif., at the 227th national meeting of the American Chemical Society. His department is within the Whiting School of Engineering at Johns Hopkins.

Tissue engineers use hydrogels, which are macromolecular networks immersed in an aqueous environment, to provide a framework or scaffold upon which to grow cells. These scientists hope to advance their techniques to the point where they can treat medical ailments by growing replacement cartilage, bones, organs and other tissue in the lab or within a human body.

The Harden lab's new hydrogel is made by mixing specially designed modular proteins in a buffered water solution. Each protein consists of a flexible central coil, containing a bioactive sequence and flanked by helical associating modules on each end. These end-modules come in three distinct types, which are designed to attract each other and form three-member bundles. This bundling leads to the formation of a regular network structure of proteins with three-member junctions linked together by the flexible coil modules. In this way, the new biomaterial assembles itself spontaneously when the protein elements are added to the solution.

The assembly process involves three different "sticky" ends. But between any two ends, Harden can insert one or more bioactive sequences, drawing from a large collection of known sequences. Once the gel has formed, each central bioactive module is capable of presenting a specific biological signal to the tissue engineer's target cells. Certain signals are needed to encourage the adhesion, proliferation and differentiation of cells in order to form particular types of tissue.

Harden's goal is to provide a large combinatorial "library" of these genetically engineered proteins. A tissue engineer could then draw from this collection to create a hydrogel for a particular purpose. "We want to let the end-user mix and match the modules to produce different types of hydrogels for selected cell and tissue engineering projects," he said.

Harden believes this technique may speed up progress in the tissue engineering field. For one thing, tissue engineers would not have to do complex chemistry work to prepare a hydrogel for each specific application; his hydrogels form spontaneously upon mixing with water. Also, unlike hydrogels that are made from synthetic polymers, the Harden team's hydrogels are made of amino acids, the native building blocks of all proteins within the body. Finally, more than one protein signaling segment can be included in the Harden team's hydrogel mix, allowing a tissue engineer to send multiple signals to the target cells, thereby supporting the simultaneous growth of several types of cells within one tissue.



#21 randolfe

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Posted 03 April 2004 - 02:32 AM

Kevin, I am simply blown away by the long article you posted. It certainly shows how traditionalists like Leon Kass, etc., look always at the negative aspects of everything.
I mean you really have to be an extremist to come up with the idea that debilitating muscle loss in old age should be welcomed because it makes it easier for you to accept death!
I am always surprised at the priceless things I find buried here at www.imminst.org I think we should have a better menu somewhere so we can direct some people to really unique postings like this one you have shared with us.

#22 kevin

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Posted 03 April 2004 - 03:18 AM

Randolfe,

When I reread it my brain burns and stomach turns... and then I realize that Kass crystallizes for me the insanity that one can sometimes take on when faced with no other choice than death. I see how he and others like him can be so afraid and unbelieving of a future without the attendant suffering of old age. The whole of the human species, including many supposed enlightented individuals, are paralyzed by only slightly weaker venom than that which has afflicted Kass.

I can easily see how one might resort to faith in an unknowable supernatural entity to try to explain the indifferent workings of the world, but at the root of all religiion and spirituality is a deep respect for and desire for health and life. For this reason I am at a loss when faced with someone who believes that death and disability have a place that should be protected in the human condition. I can hardly even type the words..

History will remember the words of Kass et al and will see them at best laughingly and at worst with the horror of the afflictions which they propose are a necessary part of human existence. They will be viewed with the proper disdain reserved for those who stood in the way of the relief of the suffering of millions; legitimizing their position with vague references to what are certainly not universally held beliefs.

Let this senitmental world of Kass's vale of tears pass quickly and quietly.. let us marshall our resources and our efforts and with each small success we will usher in yet another step a new era where health, joy and happiness are liberated from the human heart by the human mind.

#23 kevin

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Posted 06 April 2004 - 09:36 AM

Link: http://www.etrs.org/...2/section9.html


Posted Image
EUROPEAN TISSUE REPAIR SOCIETY
NEW DIRECTIONS IN TISSUE REPAIR
AND REGENERATION


A Report on a recent Discussion Meeting of the Royal Society, UK
Margaret A Hughes



Posted Image

The Royal Society, which was founded in 1660, is the UK national academy of science. It seeks to further the rôle of science, engineering and technology by offering an active communications programme, maintaining archives, publishing journals, and funding research. It was a privilege to attend the recent Discussion Meeting of the Royal Society held on 24 and 25 September 2003, which was organised by Prof Jeremy Brockes, FRS of University College, London, and Prof Paul Martin, now at Bristol. The above image illustrates some of the animals whose abilities to repair and regenerate were under consideration at the meeting. The organisers thank Dr Anoop Kumar for help in assembling the image.

The presentations given were based on many years of research by large and small groups from many centres, with sessions chaired by Prof Paul Martin, Prof Jeremy Brockes and Dr Fiona Watt.
Invited speakers were:

Professor Jonathan Slack, University of Bath, UK, on: Cell lineage and cell signalling in Xenopus tail regeneration

Professor Sabine Werner, ETH, Zurich, Switzerland, on: Fibroblast growth factors in epithelial repair and cytoprotection.

Professor Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado, University of Utah, USA, on: Functional studies of regeneration in the planarian Schmittea mediterranea.

Professor Jeremy Brockes, University College London, UK, on: Plasticity of cell differentiation during lens and limb regeneration in urodele amphibians.

Professor Paul Martin, now at University of Bristol, on: Wound Healing and morphogenesis in embryos.

Professor Ellen Heber-Katz, Wistart Institute, Philadelphia, USA, on: The scarless heart in the MRL mouse.

Professor Mark Keating, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA, on: Cardiac regeneration in the zebrafish.

Professor Malcolm Maden, Kings College, London, UK, on: Retinoic acid is a regeneration-inducing molecule for the adult mouse lung.

Professor Yann Barrandon, University of Lausanne, Switzerland, on: Multipotent stem cells and renewal of hair follicles.

Professor Michelle de Luca, Ospedale Civile di Venezia, Italy, on: Keratinocyte stem cells and tissue engin-eering.

Dr Joanna Price, Royal Veterinary College, London, on: Exploring the mechanisms regulating regeneration of the deer antler.

Professor Evan Snyder, Burnham Institute, San Diego, USA, on: Neural stem cells: developmental insights may suggest therapeutic options.

Professor Mark Ferguson, University of Manchester, UK, on: Scar free healing: from embryonic mechanisms to adult therapeutic intervention.

Professor Ron McKay
, NINDS/NIH, Bethesda, USA, on: From stem cells to synapses i the central nervous system.

Prof Alvarado pointed out that tissue replacement is broadly distributed among multicellular life forms and therefore key insights into mechanisms of regeneration can be gained from studying simpler animals. Thus research described in this meeting had investigated several animals as shown in the picture: tadpoles which regenerate tails; planarians which regenerate from very small segments; newts which can regenerate ocular tissue, limbs, lips and part of the heart; the adult MRL mouse which can regenerate cartilage and heart; zebrafish which can regenerate fins, spinal cord and retina; lung alveoli which can be induced by retinoic acid to regenerate in the adult mouse; vibrissae follicles in rodents; antler regeneration in red deer; neural regeneration in the rat. A whole variety of techniques had been used to study these processes and mechanisms and we were led through some of the complexities of the molecular biology. Both embryonic and various adult stem cell populations had been used in the reported studies.

A number of groups reported on studies to determine the precise location of stem cells in various tissues or to investigate the processes of dedifferentiation or transdif-ferentiation of such cells. For example, Prof Barrandon described studies of vibrissae, locating the hair follicle stem cells to the bulge region, although these cells can migrate while still remaining multipotent stem cells and can regenerate all the cell types of hair, sebaceous gland and epidermis. Prof de Luca identified stem cells in the basal layer of the limbus region of the eye which can be expanded and preserved by culture on a fibrin substrate. Prof Jeremy Brockes reported that it is the pigment cells on the dorsal margin of iris that transdifferentiate to regenerate lens tissue in the newt. Prof Slack reported that regeneration of the tadpole tail occurs without de-differentiation or metaplasia. The spinal cord, notochord and muscle all regenerate from the corresponding tissue in the stump. They also identified the time frame for amputation in which regeneration would or would not occur and used transgenic methods to identify some of the signalling pathways involved.

The rôle of the micro-environment, or sometimes of a specific molecule, in triggering the differentiation or regenerative process was also described. For example the regeneration of the lens in the newt appears to be thrombin-dependent. Prof Maden explained that, in the adult mouse lung, degenerate alveoli can be induced to regenerate by retinoic acid. This leads to the exciting possibility that a simple compound could be used to treat diseases such as emphysema and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, predicted to become third commonest cause of death in world by 2020. Retinoic acid is also expressed in certain regions of the deer antler, but Dr Joanna Price described how testosterone, insulin growth factor-1 and parathyroid hormone-related peptide are also key molecules for antler regeneration. The role of elastin in the regulation of arterial development was considered by Prof Keating. Prof Barrandon stated that stem cells from all layered epithelia can make hair follicles if placed in the right environment.

Prof Werner described research on keratinocytes growth factor (FGF-7), the genes it regulates and its cytoprotection against the toxic effect of reactive oxygen species on epithelial cells. Therapeutic concentrations have been identified for protection against some of the side effects of radiotherapy and chemotherapy such as oral mucositis.

Two presentations focused on neural stem cells (NSC). Prof Snyder showed how studies culminating in the transplantation of a scaffold containing neural stem cells to rats following spinal cord injury led to significantly improved hind limb function. This was believed to be partly due to the induction of axonal regeneration in the host animals. Prof McKay reported that multipotential neural stem cells have been isolated from both the foetal and adult CNS. When expanded in culture and transplanted to rat brains these cells formed neurons which interacted with astrocytes to form functional synapses. The results from these studies confirm the potential for the use of NSCs for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, stroke, degeneration due to ageing and other diseases as well as traumatic injuries.

Even when injury is repaired, either by itself or by grafting, one of the great problems in man is scarring which can lead to loss of function. This is most obvious in the skin, but is also of great concern in other organs such as the heart. Paul Martin described the investigation of both wild type and mutant Drosophila embryos and mechanisms of zippering wounds together at a stage earlier than inflammatory cells are found. It was suggested that modifying the recruitment of inflammatory cells could have potential for reducing scarring. Cardiac injury also leads to scarring in mammals, but not in amphibians. Prof Mark Keating’s group had shown that after 20% ventricular resection in zebrafish, a scarless heart was fully regenerate in two months and they were investigating mechanisms. The MRL mouse is able to regenerate a number of different tissues, including the myocardium. Prof Heber Katz described studies showing that, even after severe ventricular cryo-injury, there was complete regeneration of the heart in 60 days without any scarring. They were investigating the role of metalloproteinases and other molecules in this process.
Another area where scarring has horrific consequences is that of the eye following chemical or traumatic injury. Prof de Luca described exciting research that has already reached the stage of therapeutic use. Particularly striking were the results presented on the culture of cells from biopsies of the limbus of the contralateral eye and their use on a fibrin substrate to transplant to the eye scarred by a chemical burn. Cell grafts combined with keratoplasty have led to complete and stable recovery of sight in 67 patients out of 83 treated to date. (Preliminary results for the first eighteen patients were published in Transplantation in 2001). One case of bilateral eye injury has now been treated with allogeneic stem cells from a limbus biopsy from the sister and after two years follow-up the vision is 10/10 and is stable.

Other instances of current clinical trials were reported. Prof Ferguson described something of the role of TGFb3, expressed by both fibroblasts and keratinocytes, in scarless foetal healing and this has now gone into clinical trials for the treatment of scarring. Three other drugs developed by RENOVO for scar prevention/treatment have also gone into trial. Junctional epidermolysis bullosa is a group of severe inherited skin diseases which results in blistering due to lack of epidermal-dermal adhesion because of laminin-5 deficiency. Prof de Luca described the procedure of keratinocyte-mediated gene therapy (transferring the gene into epidermal stem cells cultured from the patient) which is starting Phase I/II clinical trials with selected patients.

This was posted as a Discussion Meeting and the fact that all the speakers kept very well to time meant that the full fifteen minutes allowed for discussion after each presentation were available and there was no lack of valuable questions and comments. The last session of the meeting was a panel (Professors Alvarado, Ferguson and McKay) and open discussion on the prospects for human regeneration, including the ethical aspects which are different in various countries. One question that arose was how available some of the therapies would become to other people. Prof de Luca, for example, answered that they plan to train ophthalmologists in other centres in Italy and then to extend their techniques world-wide.
There were 190 participants in this meeting. News of further Discussion meetings and other activities of the Royal Society can be obtained from its website www.royalsoc.ac.uk. Proceedings and written questions and answers will be published in March or April 2004.

#24 kevin

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Posted 14 April 2004 - 08:31 AM

Link: http://news.scotsman...fm?id=412012004

Posted Image
Military scientists to study regrowth of limbs

ALASTAIR DALTON SCIENCE CORRESPONDENT

HUMANS could eventually re-grow lost arms and legs if a pathfinding project launched by US military researchers proves successful.

The natural regeneration of limbs, which has fascinated scientists for more than 200 years, is seen as possible if the secrets of a similar process in amphibians can be deciphered.

The military research has been spurred by the need for potential treatments for the increasing numbers of soldiers with disfiguring injuries.

However, scientists who have long grappled with the problem believe the cloning of Dolly the sheep in 1996 and the first stem cell lines two years later have taken them significantly closer to their goal.

The United States’ Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is spearheading an initial £250,000 research project, codenamed ReGenesis, to investigate the potential of such work.

Dr Brett Giroir, the deputy director of DARPA’s defence sciences office, said the ability to regrow severed limbs could follow on from studies into accelerating the healing of wounds and burns.

He told a conference in California last month: "This ability to regenerate limbs is present in many species, and even humans can regenerate a normal liver after removing as much as 90 per cent of it during surgery.

"So why can’t this regenerative capability be available for human limbs or the brain and spinal cord?"

While flatworms, sea squirts, fish and amphibians can regrow internal organs and even entire limbs to varying extents, humans can fully regenerate only a very few tissues and organs, including the liver, the blood, and the outermost skin layer.

As children, humans can renew fingertips from the base of the nail upwards. But some scientists believe that growing a new finger could ultimately prove to be as simple as taking a pill, applying a drug-coated bandage or spraying liquid on to a freshly-damaged stump.

"This is doable - I believe it is inevitable that we will regenerate an entire human limb," Dr Ellen Heber-Katz, a biologist at the Wistar Institute in Philadelphia, told the Los Angeles Times.

The science behind the research dates back to 1768, when Lazzaro Spallanzani, an Italian monk, noted that amphibians could regrow their body parts.

One hundred years later, August Weismann, a German biologist, suggested that "ids" - or genes - provided the information which directed the body’s development.

He thought these progressively worked outwards, so cells at the elbow could construct a forearm, hand and fingers. In this way, he believed a stump should contain sufficient information for regrowing an arm or leg.

A further breakthrough came in 1976 when a group of American biologists found that when a salamander’s leg was amputated, the nascent limb which started to grow in its place would prompt other limbs to grow on the amphibian’s body if it was transplanted elsewhere.

However, some claim the science was transformed by the arrival of the world’s most famous sheep, at the Roslin Institute in Midlothian.

"Dolly was the ‘Aha!’ moment," Dr Gerald Schatten, a developmental biologist at the University of Pittsburgh, told the LA Times. "Most medical research viewed salamander regeneration as esoteric, but Dolly has changed the entire thinking about the plasticity of mammals, including humans."

The emergence of stem cells was seen as a further key step, since these offered the possibility of regenerating any other type of cell in the body.

However, researchers are still trying to establish the genetic signals which trigger the first steps towards regeneration.

Dr David Gardiner, a professor of developmental cell biology at the University of California at Irvine, who is experimenting with salamanders, believes there is a "signal and response" when wounds occur. Under this theory, when tissues are damaged in an amputation, cells at the site release signals to call in reinforcements.

Dr Gardiner is convinced that limb regrowth can be achieved because it would follow a similar process that is involved in a human embryo developing arms and legs for the first time.

But other scientists are sceptical about whether such research will ever lead to complete limbs being regrown.

Dr Bruce Carlson, of the University of Michigan, and a leading figure in regeneration research, believes the human body grows scars rather than new limbs to prevent it bleeding to death - and there is good reason for this natural defence mechanism.

Dr Jeremy Brockes, of the department of biochemistry at University College, is only marginally less sceptical.

He said: "The idea that you could make a complex structure like a limb seems at present quite fanciful."

However, he added: "I genuinely believe it is too difficult to say if it is impossible. There is no clear reason why, in principle, it should not happen."

#25 kevin

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Posted 15 April 2004 - 03:34 AM

Link: http://www.eurekaler...tm-wo041204.php




Public release date: 14-Apr-2004

Contact: Heather Russell
hrrussel@mdanderson.org
713-792-0655
University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center


When 'switched on' muscle stem cells morph to resemble nerve cells
HOUSTON -- Taking a major step forward in stem cell biology, researchers at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center have turned muscle progenitor cells -- stem cells that are "committed" to becoming muscle tissue -- into cells that look and act like neurons (nerve cells).

Using an artificial gene they created, the researchers "switched on" a panel of genes that are normally silent in the muscle cells, causing them to morph into cells that show biochemical, physiological, and structural properties of neurons.

The researchers say the advance, published in the April 15 issue of Genes and Development, provides evidence that stem cells could be profoundly "flexible" -- able to develop into different cell types.

"It is amazing to know that the fate of a cell can be changed by a single molecule," says the lead author Sadhan Majumder, Ph.D., an associate professor in the Department of Cancer Genetics. "If we can redirect muscle progenitor cells to become cells that have the properties of neurons, it may be possible to use the same kind of technique to potentially change the fate of other stem cell types."

The work was conducted in laboratory cell cultures of "myoblasts," the progenitor muscle stem cells, and the new cells were then injected into the brains of healthy mice, where the cells did not cause any ill effects. Majumder says the next phase of the research is the "big test, whether these new cells can replace neurons that are damaged inside the body. That would be a remarkable step towards neuroregeneration."

To date, nerve cell regeneration from nonneural stem cells primarily has been studied using bone marrow cells, but mouse experiments that suggested these stem cells could convert to nerve cells have been controversial. Some investigators suspect that manipulated bone marrow cells are either contaminated with neural stem cells or get fused with neuronal stem cells present in the brain, and so only appeared to become nerve cells.

To avoid any issue with such potential contamination or fusion, Majumder and his colleagues chose to use for their experiment a line of homogenous cultured myoblasts that has long been used for muscle differentiation research.

Majumder devised the artificial gene that played a key role in the experiments several years ago when studying how neural stem cells mature into neurons. Neuronal stem cells go through a series of steps before they differentiate into neurons, and each step is initiated by expression of different sets of genes. The last step, in which a large number of genes are activated, is only made possible when a repressor gene -- a kind of brake known by the acronym REST/NRSF -- is absent, allowing the set of genes to be turned on.

At the time, Majumder wanted to know what would happen if those particular genes -- the last to be activated were turned on first, by-passing the normal development process. So he and his colleagues created a new gene (REST-VP16) that was modeled on the natural repressor gene, but actually worked to turn the genes on. "We converted what is normally a brake into a gas pedal," he says.

So now the researchers tested what would happen when myoblasts, which are normally committed to become muscle, were genetically altered to express the new gas pedal gene attached to a molecular switch. To his delight, the experiment worked. When REST-VP16 was turned on in myoblasts, it was enough to block the cells' entry into the muscle differentiation pathway and caused them to show neuronal properties.

"If you keep the REST-VP16 gene off, the myoblasts became muscle," he says. "If you turn the gene on, the cells didn't even enter the muscle differentiation pathway. Instead, they looked like neurons, turned a large number of neuronal genes on and showed physiological activities of neurons.

"The study not only suggests that "the fate of stem cells can potentially be altered," says Majumder, but provides an experimental way of driving those changes.


###
Working with Majumder were M. D. Anderson researchers Yumi Watanabe, Ph.D., Sei Kameoka, Vidya Gopalakrishnan, Ph.D., Kenneth Aldape, M.D., Zhizhong Pan, Ph.D., and Frederick Lang, M.D. The study was supported by grants from the National Cancer Institute. Watanabe is now at Kyoto University and Kameoka is at Harvard University.

#26 kevin

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Posted 16 April 2004 - 11:41 PM

Link: http://www.wite.org/site/program.html

I came across this program for a tissue engineering conference. Even the titles sound awesome and I'd sure like to be there to hear what they have to say about HESC as the program itself is in Germany.. ;)



International Conference
"Strategies in Tissue Engineering"
Würzburg, Germany, 2004
Final Program


June 14-16th
 
Training Course: “Tissue Engineering and Mesenchymal Stem Cells”
Endorsed by the European Calcified Tissue Society (ECTS)
Program
Registration

(Location: Orthopaedic Intstitute, König-Ludwig-Haus, University of Würzburg)

Wednesday, June 16th
    2.00 - 5.00 pm “Articular Cartilage Repair Using the CaReS-System”
ARS Arthro AG, Esslingen (Germany)
Workshop Symposium, Congress Center, Balthasar Neumann Hall
(invited participants only)
    
7.00 - 10.00 pm Welcome Reception at the Würzburg City Hall


Thursday, June 17th
  Session 1 Stem Cells I (Franconia Hall)


Chair: Rapp U.R. (Germany)
Jakob F. (Germany)
    
  8.00 -   8.30 am Keynote Lecture 1
O-1 Benvenisty. N. (Jerusalem, Israel)
"Human Embryonic Stem Cells in Medical Research"
   
  8.30 -   9.00 am Keynote Lecture 2
O-2 Müller A.M. (Würzburg, Germany)
"Increasing the Developmental Potentials of Somatic Stem Cells by Epigenetic Modification"
  
  9.00 -   9.45 am O-3 Bieback K. (Mannheim, Germany)
"Critical Parameters for Isolation of Mesenchymal Stem Cells from Umbilical Cord Blood"
  

O-4 van den Bos C. (Langenfeld, Germany)
"Unristricted Somatic Stem Cells can be Generated from Human Umbilical Cord Blood, Cryo-Preserved, Culture-Expanded and Quality Tested to Generate a Fully Characterized Cellular Therapeutic"
  

O-5 Huss R. (Munich, Germany)
"Stem Cell-Mediated Tissue Regeneration"
  

O-6 Jakob P. (Würzburg, Germany)
"Non-Invasive Monitoring of Stem Cell Therapy with MRI"


and gobs more...

#27 kevin

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Posted 05 May 2004 - 03:45 PM

Link: http://www.guardian....1208512,00.html

As Randall Parker from the FuturePundit.com says here

If Sharpe's team succeeds this may well become the effort to coax stem cells into growing replacement body parts which will pass into widespread use. I consider that to be an important turning point from a psychological standpoint because it will show the public at large that the growth of aged and lost body parts is going to become routine. This should lead to much greater government and commercial support for development of techniques to grow replacements for still more types of body parts.


Combining this nascent treatment with those surely to come from the research of Sweeney and Rosenthal in muscles will be a powerful psychological motivator that stem cells CAN increase the length and quality of life.




Grow-your-own to replace false teeth

Ian Sample, science correspondent
Monday May 3, 2004
The Guardian


The British institution of dentures sitting in a glass of water beside the bed could be rendered obsolete by scientists who are confident that people will soon be able to replace lost teeth by growing new ones.

Instead of false teeth, a small ball of cells capable of growing into a new tooth will be implanted where the missing one used to be.

The procedure needs only a local anaesthetic and the new tooth should be fully formed within a few months of the cells being implanted.

Paul Sharpe, a specialist in the field of regenerative dentistry at the Dental Institute of King's College, London, says the new procedure has distinct advantages over false teeth that require a metal post to be driven into the jaw before being capped with a porcelain or plastic tooth.

"The surgery today can be extensive and you need to have good solid bone in the jaw and that is a major problem for some people," Professor Sharpe said.

The method could be used on far more patients because the ball of cells that grows into a tooth also produces bone that anchors to the jaw.

The choice of growing a new tooth is likely to appeal to patients. "Anyone who has lost teeth will tell you that, given the chance, they would rather have their own teeth than false ones," said Prof Sharpe. The average Briton over 50 has lost 12 teeth from a set of 32.

The procedure is fairly simple. Doctors take stem cells from the patient. These are unique in their ability to form any of the tissues that make up the body. By carefully nurturing the stem cells in a laboratory, scientists can nudge the cells down a path that will make them grow into a tooth. After a couple of weeks, the ball of cells, known as a bud, is ready to be implanted. Tests reveal what type of tooth - for example, a molar or an incisor - the bud will form.

Using a local anaesthetic, the tooth bud is inserted through a small incision into the gum. Within months, the cells will have matured into a fully-formed tooth, fused to the jawbone. As the tooth grows, it releases chemicals that encourage nerves and blood vessels to link up with it.

Tests have shown the technique to work in mice, where new teeth took weeks to grow. "There's no reason why it shouldn't work in humans, the principles are the same," said Prof Sharpe.

His team has set up a company, Odontis, to exploit the technique, and has won £400,000 from the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts and the Wellcome Trust.

#28 kevin

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Posted 11 May 2004 - 04:04 PM

Link: http://www.eurekaler...s-roi050404.php

In addition to the work of Sweeney and Rosenthal on using a non-circulating splice variant of IGF-1 to encourage muscle regeneration, there is also a significant regeneration capacity of muscle due to differentiating Adult Stem cells. The work described in paper referred to below indicates yet another possibility in the therapy of muscle degeneration.



Public release date: 11-May-2004
Contact: Mark Patterson
mpatterson@plos.org
44-1223-494-495
Public Library of Science

Regeneration of injured muscle from adult stem cells

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted Image
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Skeletal muscle has a remarkable capacity to regenerate following exercise or injury and harbors two different types of adult stem cells to accomplish the job: satellite cells and adult stem cells that can be isolated as side population (SP) cells. A certain group of these stem cells is involved in muscle tissue repair, but is only triggered into the muscle cell development pathway by injury. The question then arises: what molecular factors turn these adult stem cells into muscle cells? Now Michael Rudnicki and colleagues have shown that one gene, Pax7, has a crucial role in this process.

In previous studies, Rudnicki's group demonstrated that Pax7 is required to turn adult stem cells into muscle cells during regeneration. Here, the researchers worked with mouse models and in vitro experiments to investigate whether Pax7 is sufficient to initiate muscle cell formation in injured tissue.

They show that stem cells taken from regenerating muscle in mice lacking the Pax7 gene could not become muscle cells, and that by putting Pax7 back into stem cells taken from uninjured muscle, they can generate a population of cells that readily differentiate into muscle cells. When stem cells engineered to express Pax7 proteins were injected into the muscles of mice lacking dystrophin (the protein defective in muscular dystrophy), the cells differentiated, forming dystrophin-expressing muscle cells in the defective muscle. This shows that engineered "donor cells" can differentiate in living tissue and help repair damaged muscle of recipient mice. When the researchers injected Pax7 (using a gene therapy virus) into the damaged muscle of mice lacking Pax7, they observed the production of muscle-forming cells that not only gave rise to differentiated muscle cells, but also aided in tissue repair.

The researchers argue that these results "unequivocally establish" Pax7 as a key regulator of muscle cell differentiation in specific populations of adult stem cells during muscle tissue regeneration in mice. If therapeutic strategies that activate Pax7 in adult stem cells can turn them into muscle cells, effectively replenishing injured or diseased muscle tissue, there's hope of reversing the debilitating effects of progressive muscle-wasting diseases. Though the usefulness of such an approach in humans will require intensive investigation, the results on these mouse adult stem cells are encouraging.


###
citation: Seale P, Ishibashi J, Scim A, Rudnicki MA (2004) Pax7 is necessary and sufficient for the myogenic specification of CD45+:Sca1+ stem cells from injured muscle. PLoS Biol 2(5): e130 DOI:10.1371/journal.pbio.0020130

the published article will be accessible to interested readers at: http://www.plosbiolo...al.pbio.0020130

CONTACT:
Michael Rudnicki
Ottawa Health Research Institute
Ottawa, ON K1H 8L6
Canada
+1-613-739-6740
mailto:mrudnicki@ohri.ca

#29 kevin

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Posted 13 May 2004 - 03:54 PM

Link: http://www.eurekaler...a-esc050704.php

Liquid injectable polymer scaffolding that hardens at body temperature providing a hospitable environment for the differentiation of embryonic stem cells. Neat.




Public release date: 13-May-2004
Contact: Amy Adams
amyadams@stanford.edu
650-723-3900
American Medical Association

Embryonic stem cell - based tissue engineering may help repair damaged heart muscle
New approaches could benefit patients with congestive heart failure

NEW YORK--Embryonic stem cells may hold the key to regenerating damaged heart muscle, when transplanted within a 3-dimensional scaffold into the infracted heart, according to a new study coming out in June in the Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation. In the study, embryonic stem cells were more successful in restoring heart muscle when transplanted within a 3-dimensional matrix into damaged hearts in an animal model of severe infarction.

The new study addresses several problems that have plagued previous attempts to regenerate damaged heart muscle, according to Theo Kofidis, M.D., who has an active tissue engineering program at Stanford.

"Tissue engineering holds out promise of truly healing the heart after congestive heart failure," said Dr. Kofidis, lead author of the study and research fellow in cardiothoracic surgery at the Falk Research Center at Stanford University Medical School in Stanford, Calif. "There are 460,000 cases of congestive heart failure in the United States each year and the preeminently efficient treatment we have at this time is heart transplantation. Through tissue engineering we could actually restore the function of the heart by replacing large portions of the damaged heart muscle by a bioartificial one."

Dr. Kofidis spoke today at an American Medical Association media briefing on cardiology in New York City.

Kofidis and his colleagues had been working with bone marrow stem cells, but these cells were not able to become heart muscle cells and regenerate the heart. "In our most recent studies we showed that mouse and human embryonic stem cells improved heart function, had superior survival within the heart – weeks later we still saw improved heart function – and had definitely differentiated into heart muscle cells," he said. "We inserted a bioluminescent marker (what causes fireflies to luminesce) into our stem cells and were able to see that they engrafted in the living organ."

There are two components to tissue engineering, according to Dr. Kofidis: the cells that will replace the dead cells and regenerate the organ, and the supporting framework that will distribute the cells evenly and maintain the 3-D shape necessary for proper functioning of the organ.

"We have been working for a long time on developing the ideal scaffolding to support the injected cells and the architecture of the organ," said Dr. Kofidis. "We have identified a collagen, a mesh-like structure, that we have manipulated into an excellent framework. The cells distribute evenly into this meshwork, which is a liquid. Then, due to its liquid nature, we are able to inject it into the heart through an endoscope, with much less surgical trauma than if we had to open the chest to reach the heart. This liquid tissue solidifies at body temperature. [Holy cow -KP]

"We let Nature integrate this tissue," said Dr. Kofidis. "We inject it as a liquid and let it consolidate within the affected heart where it supports the geometry of the damaged region. One of the problems in congestive heart failure is that the wall of the heart's chamber becomes thinner and thinner as the heart muscle cells die off. Eventually it is too weak to beat properly."

With the integration of the human embryonic stem cells and their patented supporting framework, Kofidis hopes that they have the two pieces of the puzzle needed to successfully integrate regenerative cells into the damaged heart, maintain its geometry and restore its function.

"A word of warning may be appropriate here. Only a few years ago many people thought an artificial heart was around the corner," said Dr. Kofidis. "We now know that there are many problems to overcome and questions to answer. In order to reproduce nature with the highest possible fidelity we have to build something that follows the natural architecture of the heart."


###
Media Advisory: To contact Theo Kofidis, M.D., call Amy Adams at (650) 723-3900, or email amyadams@stanford.edu. On the day of the briefing, call the AMA's Science News Department at 312/464-2410.




And here's a little something on the 'scaffolding' mechansims and methods..
Link: http://ejcts.ctsnetj...stract/24/6/906




Posted Image

Bioartificial grafts for transmural myocardial restoration: a new cardiovascular tissue culture concept
Theo Kofidisa,b,c*, Andre Lenza,c, Jan Boublika,c, Payam Akhyaria,c, Bjoern Wachsmanna,c, Knut Mueller Stahla,c, Axel Havericha,b,c, Rainer G. Leyha
a Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Hannover Medical School, Hannover, Germany
b ARTISS GmbH, Hannover, Germany
c Leibniz Laboratories for Biotechnology and Artificial Organs, Hannover, Germany

Received 8 January 2003; received in revised form 10 June 2003; accepted 21 July 2003.

* Corresponding author. Cardiothoracic Surgery/Falk Research Center, 2 fl, Stanford University Medical School, 300 Pasteur Dr., Stanford CA 94305, USA. Tel.: +1-650-725-3828; fax: +1-650-725-3846
e-mail: tkofidis@stanford.edu


Objective: Survival of bioartificial grafts that are destined to restore cardiac function stands and falls with their nutrient supply. Engineering of myocardial tissue is limited because of lack of vascularization. We introduce a new concept to obtain bioartificial myocardial grafts in which perfusion by a macroscopic core vessel is simulated. Methods: We have designed an experimental reactor with multiple chambers for the production of bioartificial tissue or tissue precursors. By introduction of in- and output lines of distinct diameter and insertion of a core vessel into each chamber, we established pulsatile, continuous flow through the embodied three-dimensional tissue culture. In the present study, collagen components served as the ground matrix wherein neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were inoculated. For the assessment of cellular viability and distribution in comparison to static, non-perfused culture, fluor-desoxy-glucose-positron-emission-tomography and life/dead assays were employed. Results: We obtained 3D constructs of 8-mm thickness, which display high viability and metabolism (6.0±1.3e-03 in the perfused vs. 4.0±0.3e-03 in the unperfused chambers). The core vessel has the size of a human coronary and remained patent during the entire culture process. We observed centripetal migration of the embedded cardiomyocytes to the site of the core vessel. Cardiomyocytes partially resumed a spindle like form without additional stretch. Conclusions: The present dynamic tissue culture concept is highly effective in manufacturing thick, viable grafts for cardiac muscle restoration, which could be surgically anastomosable. The bioreactor may accommodate multiple types of cells and tissues for innumerable in vitro and in vivo applications.


Key Words: Myocardial grafts • Tissue engineering • Cardiomyocytes

Link to PDF ($25 US): http://ejcts.ctsnetj...eprint/24/6/906

Click HERE to rent this BIOSCIENCE adspot to support LongeCity (this will replace the google ad above).

#30 kevin

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Posted 01 June 2004 - 07:12 AM

Link: http://www.eurekaler...c-cff052604.php


Contact: Richard Merritt
merri006@mc.duke.edu
919-684-4148
Duke University Medical Center


Cells from fat tissue turned into functional nerve cells Posted Image
Henry Rice, M.D., and Kristine Safford
DURHAM, N.C. -- Two years after transforming human fat cells into what appeared to be nerve cells, a group led by Duke University Medical Center researchers has gone one step further by demonstrating that these new cells also appear to act like nerve cells.

The team said that the results of its latest experiments provide the most compelling scientific evidence to date that researchers will in the future be able to take cells from a practically limitless source -- fat -- and retrain them to differentiate along new developmental paths. These cells, they said, could then be used to possibly treat a number of human ailments of the central and peripheral nervous systems.

The results of the team's latest experiments were published June 1, 2004, in the journal Experimental Neurology.

Using a cocktail of growth factors and induction agents, the researchers transformed cells isolated from mouse fat, also known as adipose tissue, into two important nerve cell types: neurons and glial cells. Neurons carry electrical signals from cell to cell, while glial cells surround neurons like a sheath.

"We have demonstrated that within fat tissue there is a population of stromal cells that can differentiate into different types of cells with many of the characteristics of neuronal and glial cells," said Duke's Kristine Safford, first author of the paper. "These findings support more research into developing adipose tissue as a viable source for cellular-based therapies."

Over the past several years, Duke scientists have demonstrated the ability to reprogram these adipose-derived adult stromal cells into fat, cartilage and bone cells. All of these cells arise from mesenchymal, or connective tissue, parentage. However, the latest experiments have demonstrated that researchers can transform these cells from fat into a totally different lineage.

Earlier this year, Duke researchers demonstrated that these adipose-derived cells are truly adult stem cells. As a source of cells for treatment, adipose tissue is not only limitless, it does not carry the potentially charged ethical or political concerns as other stem cell sources, the researchers said.

"This is a big step to take undifferentiated cells that haven't committed to a particular future and redirect them to develop down a different path," said Duke surgeon Henry Rice, M.D., senior member of the research team. "Results such as these challenge the traditional dogma that once cells become a certain type of tissue they are locked into that destiny. While it appears that we have awakened a new pathway of development, the exact trigger for this change is still not known."

For their latest experiments, the researchers demonstrated that the newly transformed adipose cells expressed many similar cellular proteins as normal nerve and glial cells. Furthermore, they showed that the function of these cells is similar to nerves.

They exposed these newly formed cells to N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA), an agent which blocks the activity of the neurotransmitter glutamate and is toxic to nerve cells. In response to NMDA, the newly induced cells died, a response similar to normal nerve cells under the same conditions. Physiologic insults -- such as stroke -- can stimulate NMDA receptors on nerve cells, which can cause nerve cell damage or death by over-stimulating them.

"We found that these induced adipose cells demonstrated an excitotoxic response to NMDA that corresponded with a loss of cell viability, which suggests that these induced cells had formed functional NMDA receptors similar to those found on nerve cells," Rice explained. "Recent studies have demonstrated that NMDA receptor activation by glutamate may induce early gene transcription in developing neurons as well as determine the rate of neuronal proliferation in the brain. Our findings suggest that these induced cells exhibit characteristics similar to developing neuronal tissue."

Now that the researchers are confident that these newly induced cells appear to have similar functions as nerve cells, the next step will be to see how they respond when they are implanted a living animal model.

"While this is an important step forward, we still face many challenges to making use of these cells to treat human problems," said longtime collaborator Jeffrey Gimble, M.D., Pennington Biomedical Research Center at Louisiana State University System. "It seems probable that the potential first uses of such therapy would be in an acute setting, where you would have a window of opportunity right after a stroke, or spinal cord or peripheral nerve injury."

Until recently, it was believed that organisms were born with the full complement of neuronal cells, and that new neurons could not be formed. According to the researchers, the findings of their studies, as well as the experiments performed by others on bone marrow stem cells, opens up new possibilities for the treatment of nervous system disorders or injuries.

"We are trying to think about human disease in a new way," Gimble said. "Everyone is used to the concept of surgical, medical or pharmacological approaches to the treatment of disease -- we're looking at one of the next steps in biotechnology, which is using cellular therapies."

The current research was supported by the Owen H. Wangenstein, M.D., Faculty Research Fellowship of the American College of Surgeons. Other members of the Duke team included Shawn Safford, M.D., and Ashok Shetty, Ph.D.


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