Sodium plays key role in initiating regenerative response after injury
September 29th, 2010 - 2:26 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Sep 29 (ANI): Sodium, which gets a bad rap for contributing to hypertension and cardiovascular disease, also plays a key role in initiating a regenerative response after severe injury, say scientists.
Biologists at Tufts University’s School of Arts and Sciences have discovered a way to regenerate injured spinal cord and muscle by using small molecule drugs to trigger an influx of sodium ions into injured cells.
The approach breaks new ground in the field of biomedicine because it requires no gene therapy; can be administered after an injury has occurred and even after the wound has healed over; and is bioelectric, rather than chemically based.
Tufts team carried out research on tadpoles because, like humans, they regenerate fingertips only as children and the findings were tremendous mostly directly applicable to spinal cord repair and limb loss.
“We have significantly extended the effective treatment window, demonstrating that even after scar-like wound covering begins to form, control of physiological signals can still induce regeneration. Artificially causing an influx of sodium for just one hour can overcome a variety of problems, such as the decline in regenerative ability that comes with age and the effect of regeneration-blocking drugs,” said Michael Levin, Tufts Professor of Biology and corresponding author on the paper.
“The ability to restore regeneration using a temporally-controllable pharmacological approach not requiring gene therapy is extremely exciting,” concluded researchers.
The study has been published in last end September issue of the Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)
- Genes that regenerate nerves after injury isolated - Sep 22, 2011
- Breakthrough: Nerve connections regenerated after spinal cord injury - Aug 09, 2010
- Gene therapy helps regenerate injured brain cells - Feb 16, 2012
- New treatment could help minimize nerve damage in spinal cord injuries - May 04, 2011
- Cancer drug shows promise in regeneration of spinal cord injuries - Jan 29, 2011
- Human neural stem cells 'can restore mobility in chronic spinal cord injury cases' - Aug 20, 2010
- Scientists develop toothy way to treat spinal injuries - Dec 04, 2011
- Scientists find extensive natural recovery after spinal cord injury - Nov 15, 2010
- Enzyme treatment could improve recovery from spinal cord injury - Jun 10, 2010
- Chemical hormone that can help find right connection after spinal cord injury identified - Aug 03, 2009
- Scientists focus on human cells for spinal cord injury repair - Mar 03, 2011
- New treatment to heal spinal injuries - Nov 17, 2011
- Pioneering surgery helps paralysed man move hand - May 17, 2012
- Stem cells can fix damaged spinal cord tissue - Oct 09, 2010
- Now stem cell treatment for paralysed patients - Aug 18, 2010
Tags: bad rap, biologists, biomedicine, cardiovascular disease, gene therapy, hypertension, influx, key role, limb loss, michael levin, molecule drugs, new ground, physiological signals, regeneration, september issue, sodium ions, spinal cord, spinal cord repair, tadpoles, tufts university