Hair follicle stem cells repair nerve damage
Tissues differentiated from hair follicle stem cells have helped mice with
severe sciatic nerve damage walk again, US and Japanese scientists reported on
Monday.
These results suggest that hair follicle stem cells can promote nervous axon
growth and functional recovery after nerve injury, thus offering an opportunity
for the clinical treatment of peripheral nerve diseases, said the researchers.
The team, including researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
the Kitasato University of Japan, and the University of California, San Diego,
reported this achievement in the latest issue of the journal the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.
Embryonic stem cells, known to be capable of differentiating into almost all
tissue cells, have aroused ethical debates in many countries. Scientists also
found that problems such as immunologic incompatibility are linked with
embryonic stem cells.
Therefore, more recent studies have focused on adult stem cells for future
clinical applications. And hair follicles afford a highly promising source of
relatively abundant and accessible, active, pluripotent adult stem cells, said
the researchers.
In earlier studies, the team led by Robert Hoffman, a professor at the
University of California, San Diego, has induced hair follicle stem cells to
differentiate into blood vessel cells and neurons. The researchers said these
studies suggested the potential of hair follicle stem cells to form diverse cell
types.
Now the researchers have successfully coaxed the hair follicle stem cells to
evolve into the Shwann cells, a variety of glia cells that wrap around axons in
the peripheral nervous system.
When injected into disabled mice with injured sciatic nerve, these Shwann cells
produced myelin sheaths that surround nerve axons, and then the mice were able
to walk normally, the researchers reported.
"Therefore, by differentiating into Schwann cells, the hair follicle stem cells
may stimulate the host axons to extend and, thus, to fill the transection gap,"
they said in the paper.
Hair follicle stem cells may be more promising in therapies, according to the
researchers. In the future, patients with injured nervous system could be cured
with their own hair follicle.
"Cell-replacement therapies show particular promise in the nervous system, where
transplanted embryonic or bone-marrow stem cells have been shown to promote
functional recovery in animal models of, for example, spinal cord or peripheral
nerve injury," their paper said.
"Although the therapeutic potential of such transplants is clear, a number of
problems remain. In particular, use of fetal tissue raise ethical issues," the
paper noted. "Moreover, the use of heterologous human tissue requires
immunosuppression, which is particularly problematic in individuals with
long-term, neuron-specific problems."
"In this regard, the fact that hair follicle stem cells are generated from an
autologous and accessible adult tissue source, skin, and that they can readily
generate neuron-specific cell types provides a potential solution to these
problems," the researchers concluded.
Source: Xinhua
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