Published: 7:18PM Tuesday July 21, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersA microscopic view shows a colony of human embryonic stem cells (light blue) growing on fibroblasts (dark blue)
Ordinary cells reprogrammed to act like embryonic stem cells can
help repair damaged heart tissue in mice, researchers reported in a
study that shows a potential practical use for the experimental
cells.
When injected into mice whose hearts had been damaged by a heart
attack, the new cells helped improve both the structure and
function of the heart.
Eventually the hope would be to patch up seriously ill heart
patients using their own cells.
"It was obvious to the observer which animals had been treated and
which ones hadn't," said Dr Timothy Nelson of the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minnesota, whose study appears in the journal
Circulation.
The team used a promising new type of embryonic-like stem cell
called an induced pluripotent stem cell, or iPS cell, made from
ordinary cells.
Many teams are using this new technology to look for ways to
repair the body, a fast-growing field of research known as
regenerative medicine.
Nelson and colleagues tested the technology as a way to regenerate
heart muscle damaged by a heart attack.
"We're taking advantage of a diseased tissue environment that is
sending out a distress signal that is asking the tissue to repair
itself," Nelson said.
"When we put these iPS cells in, they are able to respond."
Like embryonic stem cells, induced pluripotent stem cells have the
ability to form any kind of cell in the body.
Because they come from adult tissue, their use is less
controversial than embryonic stem cells, which come from days-old
embryos.
There are several ways to make iPS cells, but Nelson's team used a
method in which a virus is used to transplant genes that turn back
the clock on the cells.
For Nelson, the point was not making the cells, but seeing whether
they could make any difference in damaged heart tissue.
Wow factor
Instead of coaxing the iPS cells into a specific type of heart
tissue, they used the iPS cells in their most embryonic-like
state.
Nelson said two weeks after they had transplanted the cells, they
started making different types of heart tissue, including heart
muscle, blood vessels and the cells that line blood vessels.
"They were able to respond to this damaged environment and
spontaneously give rise to the appropriate tissues and create new
tissues within that diseased heart," he said.
"That is a key wow factor of this paper."
Nelson said heart cells continued to grow for four weeks, and the
mice that got the iPS cells got better.
Both the structure and the function of their hearts improved
compared to animals injected with cells that form scar tissue, he
said.
The treated animals were able to move better, and an ultrasound
found significant improvement in the ability of the heart to pump
blood.
Nelson said the finding shows promise for human treatments.
IPS cells could in theory be made using a patient's own skin,
allowing grow-your-own transplants with no risk of rejection.
Currently, no iPS cells are being used in people because scientists
are still working on safe ways to make them, and several teams have
made progress.
Nelson said it may take several years, but he thinks the technology
could be used to help people in need of heart transplants.
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