Researchers cure mice with damaged spines using human iPS cells

YouTube Preview Image

A team at Keio University has used stem cells to cure mice whose hind legs were paralyzed due to spinal cord damage, the researchers reported Wednesday at a Tokyo symposium.
The team transplanted neural stem cells grown from human iPS cells.

Team leader Hideyuki Okano, a physiology professor at Keio, said it is the first time in the world in which the curative effects of “induced pluripotent stem cells,” or iPS cells, have been confirmed.
Currently, there is no effective treatment for spinal nerve damage and treatment using iPS cells gives hope of a cure.

“It is valuable that treatment using human iPS cells has proved effective. We want to apply (the results) in a clinical setting as soon as possible,” Okano said.
The team generated neural stem cells, which will grow into nerve cells, from human iPS cells produced with a technique developed by Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University.

The team transplanted some 500,000 neural stem cells into the damaged spines of 40 mice nine days after their injuries, which is believed to be the most effective time for transplant, according to Okano.
The team used special kinds of mice that do not develop immunological rejections of transplants.

After about a month, 29 mice that survived were able to walk or run.
The other 11 mice died of diseases not related to the experiment, the team said.
Although some scientists worry that the cells could turn malignant during treatment using iPS cells, no cancer has been found among the mice, according to Okano.

from The Japan Times

Maybe you can find something interesting in the following sponsored links:

Related pages on the web
  • What is a Fatty Liver? Many of us go to a doctor for our annual exam only to be told that we have a fatty liver. For the vast majority this is a pretty confusing diagnosis and it's hard to know what we can do...
  • New cancer research examines role of chemo and radiation in spreading tumors Perhaps medical treatments putting cancer into remission are just artificially producing a middle stage of cancer before a more serious metastatic stage begins. That would appear to be one of the implications of a research report appearing in May's issue...
  • IP Phone Features That Will Make Your Life Better In fact, research firm In-Stat found that while total IP phone annual shipments will grow from 10 million units in 2006 to 164 million units in 2010, only 40 percent of IP PBX (Private Branch eXchange) seats are configured with...
  • Deep in the Heart of Texas I'm back from the great state of Texas; my visit with family was long overdo and enjoyable. One of my goals during the vacation was to maintain an exercise schedule, and honestly that was a challenge! I focused more on isometric/strength training...
  • Can Eating Curry Help With Weight Loss When the word takeaway is mentioned all sorts of images can flash into our minds, especially if we are trying to lose weight we are told consistently that we should not eat take-away's such as Indian take-aways, is this notion...
Blog Traffic Exchange Related articles on this site

0 Responses to “Researchers cure mice with damaged spines using human iPS cells”


  1. No Comments

Leave a Reply




Related Posts Widget for Blogs by LinkWithin