Stem Cells Fill Gap Left By Brain Injury
A stroke leaves a permanent gap in the brain that can destroy a person's ability
to speak and move normally. Filling that gap with new cells has been a long sought-after goal of
stem cell research, but all attempts have met with complications - until now. Researchers at
Stanford University School of Medicine report the first success using stem cells to populate the
damaged region with new neurons in rats. If those cells also replace the function of the lost cells,
they could help people recover after a stroke.
In the study, published in the July 26 advance online issue of Proceedings of the National Academies
of Science, neurosurgeon Gary Steinberg, MD, PhD, and his group found that fetal stem cells injected
into the brains of rats could migrate to the right location and turn into the appropriate types of
neurons. "We're not saying we can treat patients immediately, but it's a big step forward. This
gives us considerable optimism for these cells," Steinberg said.
The cells in question are at an early stage of developing into the mature brain and are still able
to form many types of brain cells, but until now the cells have shown that potential only in a lab
dish. Stem Cells Inc., a company founded by study co-author and pathology professor Irving Weissman,
MD, reported isolating these cells from human fetal tissue in December 2000. The company now grows
the cells in bulk and distributes them to researchers studying spinal cord injuries as well as
Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and other brain disorders. Steinberg's is the first paper to show that the
cells can transform into the appropriate cell types in an animal.
Steinberg said the fetal cells, called neurospheres, have advantages over both adult and embryonic
stem cells for treating stroke. Adult brain stem cells produce new neurons throughout a person's
life. After a stroke, these cells seem to repair some damage but aren't able to completely
compensate for the lost tissue. In animal experiments, Steinberg's group has found that additional
adult neuronal stem cells injected into the brains of rats may not survive long or migrate to the
correct location.
Human embryonic stem cells have a different set of problems. Although embryonic stem cells show
promise for treating rats with strokes, the human cells aren't widely available for research due to
federal restrictions and aren't approved for use in humans. Even if the cells effectively treated
stroke damage in rats, Steinberg couldn't offer that treatment to patients.
Fetal cells share the benefits of adult and embryonic cells without the drawbacks. This early study
suggests that they will be more effective at treating stroke than adult cells. The cells are also
available for research and are grown according to FDA-regulated Good Manufacturing Practice
standards, unlike their human embryonic counterparts. This means the cells have already passed one
FDA hurdle and could move to clinical trials in humans if Steinberg's follow-up experiments are
successful.
Steinberg warns that this study did not look at whether fetal neurospheres helped rats recover brain
function after a stroke. Instead, he and co-first authors Tonya Bliss, PhD, a research associate,
and Steven Kelly, PhD, now at the University of Bristol, wanted to determine whether the cells
migrated to the right place and turned into the right kind of cell. When stem cells were injected
close to the site of the induced stroke, the cells survived in only one out of nine mice. Steinberg
said this makes sense because the stroke site doesn't have a blood supply to keep the cells alive.
However, when injected a few millimeters away, the cells survived and migrated as far as 1.2
millimeters toward the stroke region. Steinberg believes signals from the damaged cells act as a
distress call beckoning the transplanted cells. Other signals direct the newly arrived cells to
transform into neurons and support cells called astrocytes. In rats without an induced stroke, the
injected cells migrated only an average of 0.2 millimeters.
"The next step is to show recovery," Steinberg said. His group examined the transplanted cells after
only four weeks, too soon to know whether the cells can help the rats recover. In the next set of
experiments they will study whether the neurospheres help the rats recover normal movement after the
stroke.
Michael Marks, MD, associate professor of radiology and a faculty member at the Stanford Stroke
Center, said he is encouraged by Steinberg's findings. Marks said there is currently no way to treat
patients who have lost brain function after a stroke. "This would be a very important therapeutic
tool for us to have," he said, adding that existing treatments are only effective in the first few
hours after the stroke. Most patients don't arrive at the hospital within that window and therefore
have no options for reducing damage to their brain cells. "A therapy like this has tremendous
potential," he said.
