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sleepygrlgreen
01/31/06, 09:55 AM
For those of you who don't want to read this all, the title really says it all. I think that this could really revolutionize treatment for degenerative diseases.

Engineered stem cells show promise for sneaking drugs into the brain
Dec 15, 2005
Terry Devitt (trdevitt@wisc.edu)
One of the great challenges for treating Parkinson's diseases and other neurodegenerative disorders is getting medicine to the right place in the brain.
The brain is a complex organ with many different types of cells and structures, and it is fortified with a protective barrier erected by blood vessels and glial cells - the brain's structural building blocks - that effectively blocks the delivery of most drugs from the bloodstream.
But now scientists have found a new way to sneak drugs past the blood-brain barrier by engineering and implanting progenitor brain cells derived from stem cells to produce and deliver a critical growth factor that has already shown clinical promise for treating Parkinson's disease.
Writing today in the journal Gene Therapy, UW-Madison neuroscientist Clive Svendsen (http://www.waisman.wisc.edu/faculty/svendsen.html) and his colleagues describe experiments that demonstrate that engineered human brain progenitor cells, transplanted into the brains of rats and monkeys, can effectively integrate into the brain and deliver medicine where it is needed.
The Wisconsin team obtained and grew large numbers of progenitor cells from human fetal brain tissue. They then engineered the cells to produce a growth factor known as glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF). In some small but promising clinical trials, GDNF showed a marked ability to provide relief from the debilitating symptoms of Parkinson's. But the drug, which is expensive and hard to obtain, had to be pumped directly into the brains of Parkinson's patients for it to work, as it is unable to cross the blood-brain barrier.
In an effort to develop a less invasive strategy to effectively deliver the drug to the brain, Svendsen's team implanted the GDNF secreting cells into the brains of rats and elderly primates. The cells migrated within critical areas of the brain and produced the growth factor in quantities sufficient for improving the survival and function of the defective cells at the root of Parkinson's.
"This work shows that stem cells can be used as drug delivery vehicles in the brain," says Svendsen, a professor of anatomy whose laboratory is at the UW-Madison Waisman Center (http://www.waisman.wisc.edu/index.html).
The new Wisconsin study, whose lead author is Soshana Behrstock, depended on formative brain cells that were coaxed from blank-slate stem cells. The progenitor neural cells were genetically modified to secrete the growth factor when implanted in the striatum, a large cluster of cells in the brain that controls movement, balance and walking.
To work effectively, the cells in the striatum require dopamine, a chemical that is produced deep in the brain and that travels up nerve fibers to the striatum where it is used to keep critical cells functional. Loss of the ability to produce dopamine is the root cause of Parkinson's, a disease that afflicts about 1.5 million people in the United States.
In the new Wisconsin study, the GDNF-producing cells transplanted in the striatum of animals with a condition like Parkinson's showed not only that a critical drug could be delivered to the right place, but that the drug was delivered in a way that promoted its therapeutic potential. The researchers reported new nerve fiber growth in the striatum and the transport of the critical nerve growth factor GDNF from the striatum to the substantia niagra, the part of the brain that harbors the cells that produce dopamine.
"In Parkinson's, the striatum loses fibers," Svendsen explains. But cells in the striatum exposed to GDNF in the Wisconsin study showed an ability to recover and sprout new fibers.
"It actually seems to work better in the terminal (striatum)," Svendsen says. "The bonus is it gets transported back to the substantia niagra."
The transplanted cells, according to Behrstock, survived and continued to produce GDNF in laboratory animals for up to three months.
One hurdle that needs to be overcome before such a technique could be attempted in human patients, says Svendsen, is developing a method to switch transplanted cells on or off and thus control their drug delivery capabilities. Working with engineered cells in culture, the Wisconsin group found they could switch the cells on and off using a second drug. Doing so in animal models, however, was more difficult and the issue will need to be addressed in new experiments, according to Svendsen.
The new study, Svendsen argues, proves that progenitor cells - cells that can now be made in large quantities in the laboratory - can be crafted to help clinicians deliver drugs where they are needed most in the body. Delivering medicine to the brain, whose blood-brain barrier effectively excludes more than 70 percent of all drugs, would be an especially valuable use for the cells. Such a new method may be useful for treating a number of neurodegenerative diseases beyond Parkinson's, he says.
In addition to Svendsen and Behrstock, authors of the new Gene Therapy paper include Allison Ebert, Jacqueline McHugh, Stephen Vosberg, Elizabeth Capowski, Bernard Schneider and Derek Hei, all of UW-Madison; Jeffery Kordower of Rush University Medical Center; and Patrick Aebischer of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology.

fedhed7
01/31/06, 04:49 PM
Thats incredible. Bush is retarded for suspending the research on stem cells.

richter915
01/31/06, 05:20 PM
stop supporting abortion you liberal tree hugging bushy arm-pitted whore.

fedhed7
01/31/06, 06:18 PM
stop supporting abortion you liberal tree hugging bushy arm-pitted whore.

:stick:

Stem cell research is not abortion.

richter915
01/31/06, 06:25 PM
:stick:

Stem cell research is not abortion.
that's why I said "supporting"...

I'm just pointing out the retarded argument used to fight stem cell research.

fedhed7
01/31/06, 07:40 PM
that's why I said "supporting"...

I'm just pointing out the retarded argument used to fight stem cell research.

Oh, ok. Then good point.

MLLMillenium
01/31/06, 09:05 PM
that's why I said "supporting"...

I'm just pointing out the retarded argument used to fight stem cell research.
"

Pro choice > Life.

sleepygrlgreen
01/31/06, 09:26 PM
stop turning this into an abortion thread!

exxxoduss
02/01/06, 08:55 AM
stop supporting abortion you liberal tree hugging bushy arm-pitted whore.

stop bringing the abortion debate into this thread. the two are linked, but there is the other thread to argue abortion.

can we not just talk about the advance of stem cell research and how we could possibly help treatment for degenerative diseases. and what was said in the article?

Johnny_G
02/01/06, 09:11 AM
stop bringing the abortion debate into this thread. the two are linked, but there is the other thread to argue abortion.

can we not just talk about the advance of stem cell research and how we could possibly help treatment for degenerative diseases. and what was said in the article?

*Laughs at inability to recognize sarcasm*

exxxoduss
02/01/06, 09:19 AM
it doesn't matter if there is sacrasm or not, it bring the topic up and people start talking about it.

"Stem cell research is not abortion."

"that's why I said "supporting"...

I'm just pointing out the retarded argument used to fight stem cell research."

this isn't the place for it.

richter915
02/02/06, 09:10 PM
stop bringing the abortion debate into this thread. the two are linked, but there is the other thread to argue abortion.

can we not just talk about the advance of stem cell research and how we could possibly help treatment for degenerative diseases. and what was said in the article?
hah you clearly did not read the other posts

it's going to happen no matter what...yes we all know how good stem cell research is...here's an article showing how it can help people with lupus: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060201/sc_nm/stemcells_dc;_ylt=AntvQMUQvzzsAeRW2 _3BOl8PLBIF;_ylu=X3oDMTA5aHJvMDdwBH NlYwN5bmNhdA--

the point is that stem cell research would not be an issue if it wasn't for dumbasses constantly relating it back to abortion...and if you think what me and you are doing right now is just that, you're wrong. We're discussing how the issue should have nothing to do with the morality of abortion...but like I said, if it wasn't for that, this discussion wouldn't exist. We would go full force with gov't funded stem cell research and it would save actual lives. we can't always get what we want.

sleepygrlgreen
02/02/06, 09:27 PM
you know what i'm never going to get? it's unethical to take stem cells from embryos for the sake of saving something that is nor dead or alive yet, in my opinion, but it's ethical to prevent thousands of people with various degenerative diseases and paralysis getting help and even possibly getting their lives back.

aminorthreat55
02/02/06, 10:46 PM
My mom is very well read on stem cell research; she's been to a couple conferences and panel debates and stuff. She knows a lot of interesting things. I on the other hand, do not.

fedhed7
02/03/06, 08:25 AM
If i'm not mistaken, stem cells helped cure Andrew McMahon.

noodledancer
02/04/06, 12:16 PM
wow, that was a really cool article, but i'm not inclined to get too excited until it's been shown to work in humans.

If i'm not mistaken, stem cells helped cure Andrew McMahon.

andrew got adult stem cells from his sister, not fetal cells, which are the cause of all the much debate.

sleepygrlgreen
02/07/06, 10:53 AM
If i'm not mistaken, stem cells helped cure Andrew McMahon.They have already helped a good deal of people.

sleepygrlgreen
02/07/06, 10:54 AM
wow, that was a really cool article, but i'm not inclined to get too excited until it's been shown to work in humans.



yeah, i hear ya. i don't know if it would happen though..not for a while at least.

Mercy Medical
02/07/06, 10:57 AM
I'm actually doing research at work right now about stem cells, but the stuff I'm researching talks about using mesenchymal stem cells that can be harvested from bone marrow and is used more for regeneration of bone, cartilage, muscle and neurons.

richter915
02/07/06, 02:55 PM
yeah, i hear ya. i don't know if it would happen though..not for a while at least.
most research really gets put to "good" use when the government gets involved. Do you think the A-bomb woulda came about so fast without government involvement? That's the sad part right there, the government would rather put it's money into finding ways to kill people faster rather than save people faster.

sleepygrlgreen
02/08/06, 07:55 PM
A professor in Harvard (who is totally loaded, btw) does his own research with embryonic stem cells to eliminate diabetes. Both of his children have diabetes and he made it his life's goal more or less to find a cure for it. ALthough the government would never allow this, because he has money, he doesn't need grants. Everything is privately funded and from what I've heard, he's already worked with I think 15 stem cell lines.