Age may influence how stem cell therapy works
June 26th, 2009 - 4:48 pm ICT by ANI
- Washington, June 26 (ANI): Scientists have found that genes important for forming muscle cells in embryos and newborns are not needed in adult muscle stem cells to regenerate muscles after injury.
The discovery challenges the current course of research into muscular dystrophy, muscle injury, and regenerative medicine, which uses stem cells for healing tissues.
The finding also favours using age-matched stem cells for therapy.
Christoph Lepper and colleagues from Carnegie Institute’s Department of Embryology report their findings in the journal Nature.
Previous studies have shown that two genes, Pax3 and Pax7, are essential for making the embryonic and neonatal muscle stem cells in the mouse.
To get a better understanding of their function, Lepper and colleagues studied these genes at various stages of development in mice.
“I thought that if they are so important in the embryo, they must be important for adult muscle stem cells. Using genetic tricks, I was able to suppress both genes in the adult muscle stem cells. I was totally surprised to find that the muscle stem cells are normal without them,” Lepper said.
The researchers then looked at whether the same was true in injured muscles, when muscle stem cells go to work making new muscle tissue.
To study this, they injured mouse leg muscles between the knee and ankle, and found the muscle stem cells were able to make new muscle, even without the two key embryonic muscle stem cell genes.
The team says the embryonic muscle cell genes appear to only be active in mice within the first three weeks after birth. After that, they believe the genes go quiet and allow a different set of genes to take over.
Finding those genes will be important as scientists pursue new treatments for diseases like muscular dystrophy, a genetic, degenerative disease that affects voluntary muscles, the researchers say. (ANI)
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- carnegie institute
- cell genes
- degenerative disease
- embryo
- embryos
- journal nature
- leg muscles
- lepper
- mice
- muscle cell
- muscle cells
- muscle injury
- muscle tissue
- muscular dystrophy
- newborns
- regenerative medicine
- stages of development
- stem cell therapy
- stem cells
- voluntary muscles
Posted in Health Science, |