Stem cell transplantation benefits mice with
childhood motor neuron disease
The motor neuron disease spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the
second most common genetic disorder leading to death in childhood. There is
currently no cure for SMA, but some clinicians and researchers consider stem
cell transplantation as a potential therapeutic strategy. And now, Giacomo Comi
and colleagues, at the University of Milan, Italy, have generated data using a
mouse model of SMA to suggest that spinal cord neural stem cells (NSCs) might
be a possible treatment for individuals with SMA.
In the study, NSCs from mice in which a green marker protein was
expressed only in nerve cells known as motor neurons (the cells that are
defective in SMA) were transplanted into the fluid bathing the spinal cord of
mice with an SMA-like disease. The transplanted cells developed into a small
number of motor neurons and the treated mice showed improved muscular function
and increased lifespan, when compared with untreated mice. Further analysis
indicated that the major effect of NSC transplantation was that the
transplanted cells improved the survival and function of the motor neurons
already in the mice, making them more like normal motor neurons (at the gene
expression level). The authors therefore suggest that in the future, NSCs might
be used in the development of therapeutic protocols for the treatment of SMA
and other motor neuron diseases.
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TITLE: Neural stem cell transplantation can ameliorate the
phenotype of a mouse model of spinal muscular atrophy