By Deborah Halber
(PhysOrg.com) -- A researcher at MIT’s Picower
Institute for Learning and Memory has pinpointed stem cells within the
spinal cord that, if persuaded to differentiate into more healing cells
and fewer scarring cells following an injury, may lead to a new,
non-surgical treatment for debilitating spinal-cord injuries.The work, reported in the July issue of the journal
PLoS (Public Library of Science) Biology,
is by Konstantinos Meletis, a postdoctoral fellow at the Picower
Institute, and colleagues at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden. Their
results could lead to drugs that might restore some degree of mobility
to the 30,000 people worldwide afflicted each year with spinal-cord
injuries.
In a developing embryo, stem cells differentiate into all the
specialized tissues of the body. In adults, stem cells act as a repair
system, replenishing specialized cells, but also maintaining the normal
turnover of regenerative organs such as blood, skin or intestinal
tissues.
The tiny number of stem cells in the adult spinal cord proliferate
slowly or rarely, and fail to promote
Regeneration on their own. But
recent experiments show that these same cells, grown in the lab and
returned to the injury site, can restore some function in paralyzed
rodents and primates.
The researchers at MIT and the Karolinska Institute found that
neural stem cells in the adult spinal cord are limited to a layer of
cube- or column-shaped, cilia-covered cells called ependymal cells.
These cells make up the thin membrane lining the inner-brain ventricles
and the connecting central column of the spinal cord.
“We have been able to genetically mark this neural stem cell
population and then follow their behavior,” Meletis said.
“We find that these cells proliferate upon spinal cord injury,
migrate toward the injury site and differentiate over several
months.”
The study uncovers the molecular mechanism underlying the
tantalizing results of the rodent and primate and goes one step
further: By identifying for the first time where this subpopulation of
cells is found, they pave a path toward manipulating them with drugs to
boost their inborn ability to repair damaged nerve cells.
“The ependymal cells’ ability to turn into several
different cell types upon injury makes them very interesting from an
intervention aspect: Imagine if we could regulate the behavior of this
stem cell population to repair damaged nerve cells,” Meletis
said.
Upon injury, ependymal cells proliferate and migrate to the injured
area, producing a mass of scar-forming cells, plus fewer cells called
oligodendrocytes. The oligodendrocytes restore the
Myelin, or coating,
on nerve cells’ long, slender, electrical impulse-carrying
projections called axons. Myelin is like the layer of plastic
insulation on an electrical wire; without it, nerve cells don’t
function properly.
“The limited
Functional recovery typically associated with
Central Nervous System injuries is in part due to the failure of
severed axons to regrow and reconnect with their target cells in the
Peripheral nervous system that extends to our arms, hands, legs and
feet,” Meletis said. “The function of axons that remain
intact after injury in humans is often compromised without insulating
sheaths of myelin.”
If scientists could genetically manipulate ependymal cells to
produce more myelin and less scar tissue after a spinal cord injury,
they could potentially avoid or reverse many of the debilitating
effects of this type of injury, the researchers said.
Provided by MIT