From: Damien Broderick (d.broderick@english.unimelb.edu.au)
Date: Sun Oct 15 2000 - 20:55:20 MDT
http://www.observer.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,6903,382794,00.html
Disease hope as brain cells are grown in the lab
Robin McKie, science editor
Sunday October 15, 2000
Scientists have discovered how to grow human brain cells in the laboratory.
They have isolated neurones from several key areas of the cortex and plan
to transplant them into patients suffering from epilepsy and strokes, as
well as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's diseases.
Transplants of human brain cells have already been demonstrated in clinical
trials. However, each requires neurones that have been taken from at least
six aborted foetuses. Scientists believe their breakthrough research has
solved this crucial problem of supply.
'We could satisfy the demands of every Parkinson's patient in Europe and
the United States with cells grown in one small laboratory,' said Dr George
Foster, of Cardiff University. 'That's the immense potential of this
technology.'
The technique employed by the group - based at Cardiff and Sheffield
universities - involves the immortalisation of brain cells in culture
dishes. Neurones are bathed in chemicals that switches on a gene that keeps
the cells dividing indefinitely. The end result is an abundant supply of
human neurones. 'Other groups have managed to grow rat and mouse brain
cells in the laboratory,' said Dr Brad Stringer of Sheffield University.
'We were the first to succeed with human neurones.'
The human cells isolated come from the striatum, cortex, hippocampus and
brain stem. When neurones die in these areas, they produce, respectively:
the fatal Huntington's disease; Alzheimer's; strokes and epilepsy; and
Parkinson's disease. 'That means we now have a supply of specialised brain
cells that could be used to replace the cells lost in these conditions,'
said Foster.
The group has taken out a string of patents to protect their technologies
and have launched their own biotechnology company, CellFactors.
'We have also developed a parallel technique for growing bone cells -
called human hypertrophic chondrocytes - in the laboratory,' added company
chief executive Dr Iain Cubitt.
The firm has launched pre-clinical brain cell trials, at the Institute of
Psychiatry, London, on stroke victims, and intends to begin clinical trials
on transplants for Parkinson's disease patients by the end of next year.
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