| July
13, 2004
Nerve Cells Successfully Regenerated
Following Spinal Cord Injury
By Leslie Franz
Using a combination
of therapies and cell grafts, a team of University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine researchers has promoted
significant regeneration of nerve cells in rats with spinal
cord injury.
The therapeutic approach
successfully stimulated new nerve fibers called axons to grow
and extend well beyond the site of the injury into surrounding
tissue, following surgically induced spinal cord damage.
These
results prove that combinational therapy can promote the vigorous
growth of new axons even after a complete lesion of the spinal
cord cells, with the new growth extending through implanted
tissue grafts, and into the spinal cord and healthy tissue surrounding
the injury site, according to Mark Tuszynski, M.D., Ph.D., professor
of neurosciences at UCSD and senior author of the study. The
paper is published in the July 14 issue of the Journal of
Neurosciences.
“Previous studies
have demonstrated reduced lesion and scarring, tissue sparing
and functional recovery after acute spinal cord injury,”
said Tuszynski, who also has an appointment with the Veterans
Affairs Medical Center, San Diego. “This study shows unequivocally
that axons can be stimulated to regenerate into a cell graft
placed in a lesion site, and out again, into the spinal cord
-- the potential basis for putting together a practical therapy.”
The successful regeneration
followed complete lesion of the nerve site. The study, which
targeted sensory axons, was not designed to test functional
improvement.
Axon regeneration is
one of the many challenges confronting spinal cord researchers.
The axon is a critical communication path from the nerve cell,
with many sensory axons extending from the spine to the brain.
When the spine is severely damaged that connection is lost,
and gaps form in the healed spine that fill with fluid, an environment
that complicates regeneration efforts since axons can’t
grow across the lesion cavity. Therefore, to be successful,
regeneration therapy must stimulate growth and provide a scaffold
that creates an appropriate environment to support axonal growth.
The most dramatic axonal
growth seen in the UCSD study was in rats pre-treated with cyclic
AMP (cAMP). The team injected cAMP, an important cellular messenger
that regulates various metabolic processes, directly into the
nerve cell nucleus before creating the lesions. After surgical
severance of the spine, the injury site was implanted with a
tissue bridge of bone marrow stromal cells and treated with
neurotrophins (growth factor). In these rats, over a three-month
period significant growth of axons was noted, extending into
and beyond the tissue graft. Pre-treatment with cAMP could be
a practical approach for treating patients with established,
chronic spinal cord injuries, a possibility that is the subject
of current study by the UCSD group.
Co-authors of the paper
are Paul Lu, Ph.D., UCSD Department of Neurosciences; Leonard
Jones Ph.D., UCSD Department of Neurosciences and Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, San Diego; and Marie T. Filbin, Ph.D., Biology
Department, Hunter College, New York.
The research was supported
by the National Institutes of Health, the Veterans Administration,
the Canadian Spinal Research Organization, and the Swiss Institute
for Research into Paraplegia.
Media Contact: Leslie Franz
(619) 543-6163
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