B. Bick, . Poindexter, UT Med. School/SPL
A depletion of brain cells that produce dopamine is responsible for the mobility problems seen in people with Parkinsons disease.
Japanese researchers report promising results from an experimental therapy for Parkinsons disease that involves implanting neurons made from reprogrammed stem cells into the brain. A trial conducted in monkeys with a version of the disease showed that the treatment improved their symptoms and seemed to be safe, according to a report published on 30 August in Nature1.
The studys key finding that the implanted cells survived in the brain for at least two years without causing any dangerous effects in the body provides a major boost to researchers hopes of testing stem-cell treatments for Parkinsons in humans, say scientists.
Jun Takahashi, a stem-cell scientist at Kyoto University in Japan who led the study, says that his team plans to begin transplanting neurons made from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells into people with Parkinsons in clinical trials soon.
The research is also likely to inform several other groups worldwide that are testing different approaches to treating Parkinsons using stem cells, with trials also slated to begin soon.
Nature breaks down the latest research and what it means for the future of stem-cell treatments.
Parkinsons is a neurodegenerative condition caused by the death of cells called dopaminergic neurons, which make a neurotransmitter called dopamine in certain areas of the brain. Because dopamine-producing brain cells are involved in movement, people with the condition experience characteristic tremors and stiff muscles. Current treatments address symptoms of the disease but not the underlying cause.
Researchers have pursued the idea that pluripotent stem cells, which can form any cell type in the body, could replace dead dopamine-making neurons in people with Parkinsons, and thus potentially halt or even reverse disease progression. Embryonic stem cells, derived from human embryos, have this capacity, but they have been the subject of ethical debates. Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, which are made by coaxing adult cells into an emybronic-like state, have the same versatility without the associated ethical concerns.
Takahashis team transformed iPS cells derived from both healthy people and those with Parkinsons into dopamine-producing neurons. They then transplanted these cells into macaque monkeys with a form of the disease induced by a neuron-killing toxin.
The transplanted brain cells survived for at least two years and formed connections with the monkeys brain cells, potentially explaining why the monkeys treated with cells began moving around their cages more frequently.
Crucially, Takahashis team found no sign that the transplanted cells had developed into tumours a key concern with treatments that involve pluripotent cells or that they evoked an immune response that couldnt be controlled with immune-suppressing drugs.
Its addressing a set of critical issues that need to be investigated before one can, with confidence, move to using the cells in humans, says Anders Bjorklund, a neuroscientist at Lund University in Sweden.
I hope we can begin a clinical trial by the end of next year, says Takahashi. Such a trial would be the first iPS cell trial for Parkinson's. In 2014, a Japanese woman in her 70s became the first person to receive cells derived from iPS cells, to treat her macular degeneration.
In theory, iPS cells could be tailor-made for individual patients, which would eliminate the need to use drugs that suppress a possible immune response to foreign tissues.
But customized iPS cells are expensive to make and can take a couple months to derive and grow, Takahashi notes. So his team instead plans to establish iPS cell lines from healthy people and then use immune cell biomarkers to match them to people with Parkinsons in the hope of minimizing the immune response (and therefore the need for drugs to blunt the attack).
In a study described in an accompanying paper in Nature Communications2, Takahashis team implanted into monkeys iPS-cell-derived neurons from different macaques. They found that transplants between monkeys carrying similar white blood cell markers triggered a muted immune reaction.
Earlier this year, Chinese researchers began a Parkinsons trial that used a different approach: giving patients neural-precursor cells made from embryonic stem cells, which are intended to develop into mature dopamine-producing neurons. A year earlier, in a separate trial, patients in Australia received similar cells. But some researchers have expressed concerns that the immature transplanted cells could develop tumour-causing mutations.
Meanwhile, researchers who are part of a Parkinsons stem-cell therapy consortium called GForce-PD, of which Takahashis team is a member, are set to bring still other approaches to the clinic. Teams in the United States, Sweden and the United Kingdom are all planning trials to transplant dopamine-producing neurons made from embryonic stem cells into humans. Previously established lines of embryonic stem cells have the benefit that they are well studied and can be grown in large quantities, and so all trial participants can receive a standardized treatment, notes Bjorklund, also a consortium member.
Jeanne Loring, a stem-cell scientist at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, favours transplanting iPS-derived neurons made from a patients own cells. Although expensive, this approach avoids dangerous immunosuppressive drugs, she says. And because iPS cells are established anew for each patient, the lines go through relatively few cell divisions, minimizing the risk that they will develop tumour-causing mutations. Loring hopes to begin her teams trial in 2019. This shouldnt be a race and were cheering for success by all, she says.
Lorenz Studer, a stem-cell scientist at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City who is working on a trial that will use neurons made from embryonic stem cells, says that there are still issues to work out, such as the number of cells needed in each transplant procedure. But he says that the latest study is a sign that we are ready to move forward.
The rest is here:
Reprogrammed cells relieve Parkinson's symptoms in trials - Nature.com
- Breast Cancer Is Most Common Cancer In India, 1.38 Million Cases Diagnosed Annually. Know Estimated Incidence By 2030 - ABP Live - November 26th, 2023
- What Is Amyloidosis? All About The Rare Disease That Pervez Musharraf Suffered From - ABP Live - February 8th, 2023
- Autophagic death of neural stem cells mediates chronic stress-induced ... - November 7th, 2022
- Programmed cell death - Wikipedia - November 7th, 2022
- Hematopoietic Stem Cells | Hematopoiesis | Properties & Functions - September 4th, 2022
- Canadian Blood Services Stem Cells for Life - September 4th, 2022
- Devastation over death of schoolgirl, 11, who hoped she was beating cancer - Leicestershire Live - September 4th, 2022
- From optimized stem cell transplants to CAR T cell therapy: Advancing options for cancer, HIV and more - City of Hope - September 4th, 2022
- Scientists unlock the key to immortality in jellyfish - Syfy - September 4th, 2022
- Forge Biologics Reports Positive Clinical Data on Brain Development and Motor Function from the RESKUE Novel Phase 1/2 Gene Therapy Trial in Patients... - September 4th, 2022
- Menin Inhibitors Have Potential to Become the Next Class of Targeted Therapy in AML - Targeted Oncology - September 4th, 2022
- Wanted murder suspect John Belfield believed to still be in the UK as two more arrested over death of Thomas Campbell - The Manc - September 4th, 2022
- Next-day manufacture of a novel anti-CD19 CAR-T therapy for B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia: first-in-human clinical study | Blood Cancer Journal... - July 8th, 2022
- Can minds persist when they are cut off from the world? - Livescience.com - July 8th, 2022
- Black Adolescent Young Adults With AML Have Worse Outcomes Vs White Population - Cancer Network - July 8th, 2022
- Akari Therapeutics Announces First Patient to Complete Course of Treatment in the Phase III Part A Clinical Trial of Investigational Nomacopan in... - July 8th, 2022
- How abortion ruling could affect IVF and embryonic research - The Almanac Online - July 8th, 2022
- This Morning viewers 'in tears' after boy meets donor who saved his life - Devon Live - July 8th, 2022
- Alpena detective: 'Good people out there' | News, Sports, Jobs - Alpena News - July 8th, 2022
- 'I miss my best friend': Five-year-old runs 10k to honour girl who died from rare brain tumour - Teesside Live - July 8th, 2022
- Humanigen Announces Peer-Reviewed Publication in Thorax Supporting Early Treatment of Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients with Lenzilumab Guided by... - July 8th, 2022
- Novartis AG, AstraZeneca Plc, and Pfizer Inc Among Leading Companies in the Thyroid Cancer Pipeline Products Market | Globaldata Plc - Yahoo Finance - July 8th, 2022
- A New Strategy Could Turn the Tide in Stem Cell GVHD - Medical Device and Diagnostics Industry - January 17th, 2022
- Vertex type 1 diabetes vs stem cell therapy - The Boar - January 17th, 2022
- Two-Year OS Doubles for Patients With Philadelphia-Positive Relapsed ALL After HSCT - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network - January 17th, 2022
- Nowakowski Considers CD19 Therapy in Transplant-Ineligible DLBCL - Targeted Oncology - January 17th, 2022
- Psaki demolishes Doocy with stats as he tries to claim covid now an illness of the vaccinated - newsconcerns - January 17th, 2022
- Doctors and Researchers Probe How COVID-19 Attacks the Heart - The Scientist - January 17th, 2022
- Who does donated blood that's direly needed help? - WTOP - January 17th, 2022
- Places Where Omicron is Most Contagious Eat This Not That - Eat This, Not That - January 17th, 2022
- UHN and U of T receive $24-million federal grant for transplant research - News@UofT - January 17th, 2022
- Glycyrrhizic acid ameliorates submandibular gland oxidative stress, autophagy and vascular dysfunction in rat model of type 1 diabetes | Scientific... - January 17th, 2022
- Stem cells in cancer therapy: opportunities and challenges - January 1st, 2022
- Life After Brain Death: Is the Body Still 'Alive'? | Live ... - January 1st, 2022
- Autologous Adult Stem Cells in the Treatment of Stroke | SCCAA - Dove Medical Press - January 1st, 2022
- Stem Cell Mimicking Nanoencapsulation for Targeting Arthrit | IJN - Dove Medical Press - January 1st, 2022
- Cellular Therapies Fill Unmet Needs in R/R Multiple Myeloma - Targeted Oncology - January 1st, 2022
- Upregulated expression of actin-like 6A is a risk factor | CMAR - Dove Medical Press - January 1st, 2022
- COVID-19 Takes a Toll on People with Blood Cancers and Disorders - Cancer Health Treatment News - January 1st, 2022
- Mental health disorders and heart diseases - Rising Kashmir - January 1st, 2022
- Research breakthrough could mean better treatment for patients with most deadly form of brain tumor - EurekAlert - October 26th, 2021
- European Commission Approves Merck's KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab) Plus Chemotherapy as Treatment for Certain Patients With Locally Recurrent Unresectable... - October 26th, 2021
- European Commission Selects Humanigen's Lenzilumab as One of the 10 Most Promising Treatments for COVID-19 - Galveston County Daily News - October 26th, 2021
- Everything You Need To Know About COVID Booster Shots - Colorado Times Recorder - October 26th, 2021
- Stem cells and their role in lung transplant rejection - Michigan Medicine - October 5th, 2021
- Losing Your Hair? You Might Blame the Great Stem Cell Escape. - The New York Times - October 5th, 2021
- Will humans ever be immortal? - Livescience.com - October 5th, 2021
- Healthcare Researchers Are Putting HUMAN Immune Systems In Pigs To Study Illnesses-Here's The Tech Behind It - Tech Times - October 5th, 2021
- Why Bezos, Musk, Page and other billionaires want to live forever - New York Post - October 5th, 2021
- Faster healing of wounds can decrease pain and suffering and save lives - ABC 12 News - October 5th, 2021
- U.S. FDA Approves Kite's Tecartus as the First and Only Car T for Adults With Relapsed or Refractory B-cell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia - Business... - October 5th, 2021
- Skeletons' broken clavicles tell a centuries-old tale of humans and horses - Massive Science - October 5th, 2021
- Environmental Factor - August 2021: Extramural Papers of the Month - Environmental Factor Newsletter - August 4th, 2021
- Role of traumatic brain injury in the development of glioma | JIR - Dove Medical Press - August 4th, 2021
- Targeted Therapeutics Market: Increase in Incidence of Cancer to Drive Global Market - BioSpace - August 4th, 2021
- Accumulation of Regulatory T Cells in Triple Negative Breast Cancer Ca | CMAR - Dove Medical Press - August 4th, 2021
- Novel CAR-T Cell Therapy Produces Early and Deep Responses in Certain Patients with Multiple Myeloma - Curetoday.com - June 7th, 2021
- Autophagy suppresses the formation of hepatocyte-derived cancer-initiating ductular progenitor cells in the liver - Science Advances - June 7th, 2021
- Cancer research: New advances and innovations - Medical News Today - June 7th, 2021
- Fulvestrant Alone Found to be Superior to Venetoclax/Fulvestrant Combo in ER+/HER2- Breast Cancer - Targeted Oncology - June 7th, 2021
- Merck's KEYTRUDA Given After Surgery Reduced the Risk of Disease Recurrence or Death by 32% Versus Placebo as Adjuvant Therapy in Patients With Renal... - June 7th, 2021
- Stem cell study illuminates the cause of an inherited heart disorder | Penn Today - Penn Today - February 14th, 2021
- The race to treat a rare, fatal syndrome may help others with common disorders like diabetes - Science Magazine - February 14th, 2021
- Jasper Therapeutics Announces Positive Data from Phase 1 Clinical Trial of JSP191 as Targeted Stem Cell Conditioning Agent in Patients with... - February 14th, 2021
- The Very First Signs of an Immune Response Have Been Filmed in a Developing Embryo - ScienceAlert - February 14th, 2021
- Arlo's Army needs stem cell donor as mum begs for help to save three-year-old's life - Glasgow Live - February 14th, 2021
- Astellas and Seagen Announce Phase 3 Trial Results Demonstrating Survival Advantage of PADCEV (enfortumab vedotin-ejfv) in Patients with Previously... - February 14th, 2021
- [Full text] Successful Use of Nivolumab in a Patient with Head and Neck Cancer Aft | OTT - Dove Medical Press - February 14th, 2021
- The drug treatments offering the best hope of a way out of the Covid crisis - Telegraph.co.uk - February 14th, 2021
- In the war against Covid, an arsenal of drugs is on the way - Telegraph.co.uk - February 14th, 2021
- Kat Wests husband, Jeff West, sentenced to 16 years in wifes death - AL.com - February 9th, 2021
- Harnessing the Potential of Cell and Gene Therapy - OncLive - February 9th, 2021
- I Survived Cancer, and Then I Needed to Remember How to Live - The Atlantic - February 9th, 2021
- [Full text] Higher Red Blood Cell Distribution Width is a Poor Prognostic Factor f | CMAR - Dove Medical Press - February 9th, 2021
- West Belfast woman to be remembered in special TV documentary - Belfast Live - January 29th, 2021
- UTV documentary tells of young Belfast woman's lasting legacy to promote stem cell donation - The Irish News - January 29th, 2021
- L-MIND Trial Results Show CD19 Antibody Is Reasonable in R/R DLBCL - Targeted Oncology - January 29th, 2021
- Vertex Announces FDA Clearance of Investigational New Drug (IND) Application for VX-880, a Novel Cell Therapy for the Treatment of Type 1 Diabetes... - January 29th, 2021
- If I Have Cancer, Dementia or MS, Should I Get the Covid Vaccine? - Kaiser Health News - January 29th, 2021
- Experimental taphonomy of organelles and the fossil record of early eukaryote evolution - Science Advances - January 29th, 2021