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Tampa, FL (July 10, 2007) — A University of South Florida
neuroscientist reports that the cutting-edge research study of human stem
cells in primates with Parkinson’s disease is compelling on several fronts
– particularly how the transplanted cells did their job of easing disease
symptoms.
Paul R. Sanberg, DSc, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Neurosurgery and
Director of the Center for Aging and Brain Repair at USF Health, wrote the
commentary “Neural Stem Cells for Parkinson’s Disease: To Protect and
Repair” published July 9 in the “Early Edition” online version of journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of
America (PNAS). The expert commentary (see
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/reprint/0704704104v1) is a companion piece to
the study conducted by Gene Redmond and colleagues at Yale and Harvard
Universities and the Burnham Institute.
That NIH-funded study showed that only a small number of stem cells
turned into dopamine-producing cells – not enough to improve the primates’
function by replacing missing neurons. Instead, some stem cells turned
into astrocytes, a supportive brain cell that produces neuron-nourishing
chemicals. The researchers also identified in the brains of the primate
recipients a significant amount of dopamine-producing neurons that were
not derived from stem cells. The results suggest that stem cells may
actually trigger the brain’s own self-repair mechanisms by pumping out
molecules that boost nerve survival and blood vessel development and
decrease neural degeneration.
“We at the Center for Aging and Brain Repair at USF Health have been
arguing, for some time now, that stem cells are important for brain repair
because they provide growth factors and because they send signals to the
brain to help it repair itself,” Dr. Sanberg said. “This study in primates
showed the same effects — that the stem cells are there to act as
facilators of repair versus the original hypothesis that stem cells are
transplanted to merely replace an injured cell.”
Dr. Sanberg said the study has relevance to all audiences. “This was
one of the first studies to look at stem cells in primates with
Parkinson’s disease. It’s the first step in translating that research,” he
said. “We hear about new sources of stem cells monthly, but how we take
those cells and treat disease is going to be a significant amount of
translational work. This is one of the first studies that starts that
process — looking at primates before going into people with Parkinson’s
disease.”
While the transplanted cells appeared not to form tumors following
transplant, Dr. Sanberg said the translational research in primates raises
questions that need to be addressed before moving to human trials,
including determining the most effective cell dosing and brain sites to
target. “Pending further preclinical studies,” he writes in the
commentary, “the results so far from the current study are supportive for
developing a safe and effective stem cell treatment for Parkinson’s
disease.”
Dr. Sanberg’s commentary and the study it highlights will also be
published in the magazine edition of PNAS, a prestigious publication with
a global audience. PNAS has been a resource for multidisciplinary research
since 1914. Its online edition, where Dr. Sanberg’s commentary appears
this week, receives nearly 6 million e-visitor “hits” per month. Content
includes research reports, commentaries, reviews, perspectives, colloquium
papers, and actions of the Academy. Coverage in PNAS spans the biological,
physical, and social sciences.
Dr. Sanberg also commented on the PNAS study of neural stem cells in
Parkinson’s primates for an article appearing June 11 in Nature.com.
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