Rats paralyzed due to loss of blood flow to the spine returned to
near normal ambulatory function six weeks after receiving grafts of
human spinal stem cells (hSSCs), researchers from the University of
California, San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine report. The study, led
by Martin Marsala, M.D., UC San Diego professor of anesthesiology, is
published in the June 29, 2007 issue of the journal Neuroscience, which
is now online.
“We demonstrated that when
damage has occurred due to a loss of blood flow to the spine’s
neural cells, by grafting human neural stem cells directly into the
spinal cord we can achieve a progressive recovery of Motor
function,” said Marsala. “This could some day prove to be
an effective treatment for patients suffering from the same kind of
Ischemia-induced paralysis.” Marsala is currently testing the
human stem cell therapy for safety and efficacy in other animal models,
and hopes to move to clinical trials in humans by next year.
Paraplegia
from spinal cord ischemia is a serious complication that occurs in 20
to 40 percent of patients undergoing a surgical process called aortic
cross-clamping. When the surgeon works on the aorta, a major blood
vessel, to correct a potentially lethal aneurysm, blood flow from the
heart must be temporarily blocked with a clamp. After 30 minutes, this
lack of blood flow can result in the death of specialized spinal cord
neurons called spinal inhibitory neurons, leading to irreversible
Spasticity and rigidity, or loss of muscle control, in the lower limbs,
even though the spinal cord is intact.
“The important
difference between spinal cord ischemia and spinal cord trauma, such as
might occur in a diving or car accident, is that in the ischemia model,
no mechanical damage has occurred to the spinal cord,” said
Marsala. “The spinal cord and brain motor centers are still
partially connected, but there has been a selective loss of inhibitory
neurons in the spinal cord. Since these cells are necessary for
coordinated motor activity, our research aims to replace these lost
neurons by grafting new spinal stem cells, which repopulates the pool
of degenerated neurons.”
For this study, nine of 16
rats with induced spinal cord ischemia were injected with human spinal
stem cells 21 days after paralysis. The other seven were injected with
medium that contained no stem cells. The recovery of motor function was
evaluated in seven-day intervals, showing a progressive recovery of
ambulatory functions in the rats that received stem cells.
Three
of the nine rats injected with hSSCs returned to walking at six weeks,
and three others had improved mobility in all lower extremity joints.
All nine animals grafted with hSSCs achieved significantly better motor
scores than those in the control group, and showed a consistent
presence of transplanted cells in the spinal area. In all the rats
grafted with the stem cells, the majority of transplanted human spinal
stem cells survived and became mature neurons, according to Marsala. A
second study was conducted over a three-month period, with similar
results.
“Other human stem cell transplants in the spinal
cord have focused on repairing the Myelin-forming cells,” said
co-author Karl Johe, a researcher at Neuralstem, the company that
manufactures the hSSCs used in the study. “In this study, we
succeeded at reconstructing the neural circuitry, which had not been
done before.”
The researchers believe that the therapy
may eventually be proven even more effective in human patients, who
would be able to receive Physical Therapy once treated.
“Physical
therapy may accelerate integration of the grafted stem cells and
enhance their therapeutic benefit,” Johe said, adding that the
goal is to provide a significant gain in Functional mobility of the
patient’s legs.
This study builds on Marsala’s
previous work in rat models using human neuronal stem cells, published
in October 2004 in the European Journal of Neurosciences. In that
study, significantly improved motor function, measured by a suppression
of spastic movements and improved muscle tone, was shown in 40 to 50
percent of the animals tested. A post-mortem study of those animals
showed a robust maturation of neurons and an increase in the expression
of inhibitory neurotransmitters in the spinal cords of rats that
received transplanted neuronal cells.
Current treatment for
debilitating muscle spasticity is continuous systemic or spinal drug
treatments using implanted pumps. These approaches, while effective to
a degree, are often accompanied by side effects and eventual drug
tolerance that lessens their efficacy.
“These research
findings could offer great hope to people with spinal ischemic injury
who suffer from resulting spasticity and rigidity,” said Marsala.
###
Additional
contributors to the paper include Dasa Cizkova, Osamu Kakinohana,
Karolina Kucharova, Silvia Marsala, Karl Johe, Thomas Hazel and Michael
P. Hefferan.
The study was supported in part by grants from the NIH. This
research was supported by grant NS 40386 (M.M.), Neuralstem Inc., MD
and Centrum of Excellence APVV 51-002105 grant (D.C.).
The
California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) recently awarded
Marsala a $2.4 million grant for his research utilizing stem cells to
repair spinal cord injury resulting from transient ischemia. He is also
collaborating with the University of Michigan on a new $5 million stem
cell research project, with Marsala focusing on the potential use of
stem cells to treat the paralyzing disease amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease.
Contact:
Leslie Franz
lfranz@ucsd.edu
619-543-6163
University of California - San Diego