
UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center/Stem Cell Reports
Human embryonic stem cell-derived neurons (green) showing nuclei in blue. Left: with retinoic acid added. Right: with retinoic acid and BMP4 added, creating proprioceptive sensory interneurons (pink).
Researchers are the first to create sensory interneurons from stem cells
Researchers at the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA have, for the first time, coaxed human stem cells to become sensory interneurons — the cells that give us our sense of touch. The new protocol could be a step toward stem cell–based therapies to restore sensation in paralyzed people who have lost feeling in parts of their body.
The study, which was led by Samantha Butler, a UCLA associate professor of neurobiology and member of the Broad Stem Cell Research Center, was published today in the journal Stem Cell Reports.
Sensory interneurons, a class of neurons in the spinal cord, are responsible for relaying information from throughout the body to the central nervous system, which enables the sense of touch. The lack of a sense of touch greatly affects people who are paralyzed. For example, they often cannot feel the touch of another person, and the inability to feel pain leaves them susceptible to burns from inadvertent contact with a hot surface.
“The field has for a long time focused on making people walk again,” said Butler, the study’s senior author. “‘Making people feel again doesn’t have quite the same ring. But to walk, you need to be able to feel and to sense your body in space; the two processes really go hand in glove.”
In a separate study, published in September by the journal eLife, Butler and her colleagues discovered how signals from a family of proteins called bone morphogenetic proteins, or BMPs, influence the development of sensory interneurons in chicken embryos. The Stem Cell Reports research applies those findings to human stem cells in the lab.
When the researchers added a specific bone morphogenetic protein called BMP4, as well as another signaling molecule called retinoic acid, to human embryonic stem cells, they got a mixture of two types of sensory interneurons. DI1 sensory interneurons give people proprioception — a sense of where their body is in space — and dI3 sensory interneurons enable them to feel a sense of pressure.
The researchers found the identical mixture of sensory interneurons developed when they added the same signaling molecules to induced pluripotent stem cells, which are produced by reprogramming a patient’s own mature cells such as skin cells. This reprogramming method creates stem cells that can create any cell type while also maintaining the genetic code of the person they originated from. The ability to create sensory interneurons with a patient’s own reprogrammed cells holds significant potential for the creation of a cell-based treatment that restores the sense of touch without immune suppression.
Butler hopes to be able to create one type of interneuron at a time, which would make it easier to define the separate roles of each cell type and allow scientists to start the process of using these cells in clinical applications for people who are paralyzed. However, her research group has not yet identified how to make stem cells yield entirely dI1 or entirely dI3 cells — perhaps because another signaling pathway is involved, she said.
The researchers also have yet to determine the specific recipe of growth factors that would coax stem cells to create other types of sensory interneurons.
The group is currently implanting the new dI1 and dI3 sensory interneurons into the spinal cords of mice to understand whether the cells integrate into the nervous system and become fully functional. This is a critical step toward defining the clinical potential of the cells.
“This is a long path,” Butler said. “We haven’t solved how to restore touch but we’ve made a major first step by working out some of these protocols to create sensory interneurons.”
Learn more: UCLA scientists make cells that enable the sense of touch
The Latest on: Stem cell–based therapies
[google_news title=”” keyword=”stem cell–based therapies” num_posts=”10″ blurb_length=”0″ show_thumb=”left”]
via Google News
The Latest on: Stem cell–based therapies
- ‘Safeguarding a valuable biological resource’: Know all about umbilical cord and stem cell banking in Indiaon May 26, 2023 at 12:00 am
They can be used in transplantation procedures to replace damaged or diseased cells, stimulating the body's natural healing processes. Moreover, ongoing research is exploring their potential in ...
- Stomach stem cells hold promise as a cure for diabeteson May 25, 2023 at 10:53 pm
Researchers have taken stem cells from the human stomach and converted them into insulin-producing cells that respond to changes in blood glucose levels like healthy pancreatic cells would. The ...
- Targeting stem cells from the human stomach for treating diabeteson May 25, 2023 at 11:42 am
Stem cells from the human stomach can be converted into cells that secrete insulin in response to rising blood sugar levels, offering a promising approach to treating diabetes, according to a ...
- Scientists target human stomach cells for diabetes therapyon May 24, 2023 at 5:00 pm
Stem cells from the human stomach can be converted into cells that secrete insulin in response to rising blood sugar levels, offering a promising approach to treating diabetes, according to a ...
- Decoding stem cells for personalised regenerative medicineon May 24, 2023 at 5:21 am
Researchers developed a personalised stem cell therapy using data-driven, single-cell technique based on swift subcellular proteomic imaging.
- Can Stem Cells Be Used as Treatment for Osteoporosis?on May 23, 2023 at 3:16 am
In fact, very few stem cell-based therapies have been approved by the agency to date. As such, the FDA has warned consumers to be wary of clinics advertising stem cell therapies, as they may be ...
- Scientists Call for Tighter Regulation of Stem Cell Treatmentson May 23, 2023 at 12:45 am
After finding hundreds of clinics worldwide offering unproven stem cell "therapies" for conditions including Parkinson's and hair loss, scientists are calling for tighter regulation of stem cell ...
- Scientists call for regulation of stem cell 'treatment' fadson May 22, 2023 at 10:00 am
Scientists are calling for tighter regulation of stem cell treatments, after finding hundreds of clinics worldwide offering unproven "therapies" for conditions as varied as hair loss and Parkinson's.
- A look inside stem cells helps create personalized regenerative medicineon May 19, 2023 at 8:46 am
Researchers have examined a specific type of stem cell with an intracellular toolkit to determine which cells are most likely to create effective cell therapies.
- Cedars-Sinai to Send Stem Cells to the Space Station to Aid in the Advancement of Stem Cell-Based Therapieson May 16, 2023 at 10:16 am
Get 7 Days Free Sign In Sign In Topics ...
via Bing News