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Stem cells rescue nerve cells by direct contact Options · View
RL Schafferr
Posted: Monday, February 08, 2010 1:17:05 PM
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AHands wrote:

"Moot" but not "mute", sadly.
Aint it the truth , Al. Thanks for the spelling correction..Old dumb country boy comes out ever now and then..lol..Ron
RL Schafferr
Posted: Monday, February 08, 2010 1:35:55 PM
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ALSYOYO wrote:
Stem cells rescue nerve cells by direct contact

1-Feb-2010

Scientists at the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet have shown how transplanted stem cells can connect with and rescue threatened neurons and brain tissue. The results point the way to new possible treatments for brain damage and neurodegenerative diseases.

A possible strategy for treating neurodegenerative diseases is to transplant stem cells into the brain that prevent existing nerve cells from dying. The method has proved successful in different models, but the mechanisms behind it are still unknown. According to one hypothesis, the stem cells mature into fully-mature neurons that communicate with the threatened brain tissue; according to another, the stem cells secrete various growth factors that affect the host neurons.

The new report, co-authored by several international research groups and lead by Karolinska Institutet, shows that stem cells transplanted into damaged or threatened nerve tissue quickly establish direct channels, called gap junctions, to the nerve cells. Stem cells actively bring diseased neurons back from the brink via cross-talk through gap junctions, the connections between cells that allow molecular signals to pass back and forth. The study found that the nerve cells were prevented from dying only when these gap junctions were formed. The results were obtained from mice and human stem cells in cultivated brain tissue, and from a series of rodent models for human neurodegenerative diseases and acute brain injuries.

"Many different molecules can be transported through gap junctions," says Eric Herlenius, who led the study. "This means that a new door to the possible future treatment of neuronal damage has been opened, both figuratively and literally."

The international team of scientist, beside Karolinska Institutet, included researchers from Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute, Harvard Medical School and Université Libre de Bruxelles.

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-02/ki-scr020110.php
Wonder what the second paragraph, second line signifys? The several different models remark?..Ron
ENV
Posted: Monday, February 08, 2010 9:11:08 PM

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Models for different conditions is my guess.

--
Le meilleur vin avec les meilleurs amis
Bernard1
Posted: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 10:47:32 PM
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Another view of this research paper from www.alzforum.org.


Kiss of Life: Stem Cells Use Gap Junctions to Revive Neurons


9 February 2009. Neuronal stem cells, originally viewed a source of spare parts that would rebuild damaged circuits, are proving instead to function more like capable paramedics, coming to the rescue of degenerating neurons in multiple animal models of disease. How stem cells aid sick neurons is unclear, but in a paper to be published in PNAS online, Eric Herlenius of Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden; Richard Sidman and colleagues at Harvard Medical School; and Evan Snyder at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research, La Jolla, California, propose that stem cells initiate aid to neurons by direct cell-to-cell communication via gap junctions. Forming within hours after stem cells contact host neurons, and long before any sign of synaptic connection between the two, the gap junctions serve to modulate network activity, suppress inflammatory damage, and inhibit neuron death, the investigators show. The results suggest that gap junctions comprise an important first step in the assimilation of engrafted stem cells, nurturing neurons while providing a template for later synaptic communication.
Previous work from the same labs suggested that the mechanism by which stem cells salvage neurons requires cell-to-cell contact (see ARF related news story on Li et al., 2006), and similar results have been reported in a primate model of Parkinson disease (Redmond et al., 2007). To get a glimpse at the earliest stages of stem cell-host cell contact, first authors Johan Jäderstad and Linda Jäderstad used an in vitro system where they added green fluorescent protein-labeled mouse neural stem cells to rodent striatal slice cultures. After one month, two-thirds of the stem cells displayed membrane Na+/K+ channel activity indicative of a neuronal phenotype, but none of them showed repetitive action potentials characteristic of mature neurons. Nonetheless, the engrafted cells underwent spontaneous calcium fluctuations in concert with host neurons, suggesting they had integrated into neural networks.

Because there was no evidence of synaptic connections between the new and old cells, the researchers looked for other means of communication. A prime candidate was gap junctions, clusters of connexin proteins that form channels on the plasma membrane, link the cytosols of coupled cells, and allow the exchange of small (<1 kDa) molecules. The Jäderstads found that engrafted stem cells upregulated the connexin proteins Cx43 and Cx26, and furthermore, they detected functional gap junctions between stem cells and host cells within two to 18 hours after grafting. The junctions accounted for the network integration of the stem cells, as blocking the channels with either of two pharmacological inhibitors prevented coupled calcium transients between new and old cells. The stem cells also displayed a developmental shift in the makeup of gap junctions, similar to that seen during normal neuronal development. Initially, the stem cells expressed mostly connexin43, but as they adopted a more neuronal phenotype, they expressed more connexin26.

The results suggested that gap junctions were responsible for early cell-cell communication and network formation, but was that contact beneficial for the host neurons? The answer appears to be yes. Culturing striatal slices normally results in a level of neuron death and gliosis, but adding stem cells was able to reduce this damage. However, blocking gap junction formation with connexin43 siRNA, or blocking channel function with inhibitors, resulted in a return to normal levels of neuronal damage and death.

The same effect was seen in vivo in two different mouse models of neurodegeneration. In SCA1 mice, loss of the protein ataxin-1 leads to degeneration of cerebellar Purkinje neurons and ataxia, which can be prevented by transplanting neural stem cells. In those mice, both histological rescue of neurons and functional improvements occurred even though none of the stem cells differentiated into mature Purkinje neurons. Instead, the transplanted cells made extensive gap junction connections with host neurons. In the second model, the “nervous” mutant mouse, it was known that transplanting stem cells rescues neurons by reducing pathologically high levels of cerebellar tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). In this case, the investigators found that stem cells that did not express connexin43 were unable to form gap junctions or to rescue neurons.

The results indicate that gap junctions are a critical early step in both the integration of grafted neurons into host circuits and in protection of neurons from death. The authors propose that intracellular networks formed via gap junctions are “an early form of communication that precedes and sets the stage for later electrochemical synapses and ‘traditional’ electrophysiological communication between grafted and host cells, mimicking the connexin-mediated interaction of endogenous progenitors with their neighboring cells during CNS development.” In support of this idea, they show evidence that a similar coupling occurs upon transplantation of neuronal stem cells after spinal cord injury in rats, suggesting that their results with striatal and cerebellar neurons may be more generally applicable.—Pat McCaffrey.

Reference:
Jaderstad J, Jaderstad LM, Li J, Chintawar S, Salto C, Pandolfo M, Ouredniik V, Teng YD, Sidman RL, Arenas E, Snyder EY, Herlenius E. Communication via gap junctions underlies early functional and beneficial interactions between grafted neural stem cells and the host. PNAS Online edition. 2009 Feb 2

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