Thursday, August 05, 2010

Two New Paths to the Dream: Regeneration

Source: New York Times
Date: August 5, 2010

Summary:

The New York Times reported a story on the discovery of new approaches to regenerating limbs using the body's own cells. The first, an announcement by researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine, the ability of newts to regenerate tissue was successfully replicated in mice:

Two research reports published Friday offer novel approaches to the age-old dream of regenerating the body from its own cells. Animals like newts and zebra fish can regenerate limbs, fins, even part of the heart. If only people could do the same, amputees might grow new limbs and stricken hearts be coaxed to repair themselves.

...In the first of the two new approaches, a research group at Stanford University led by Helen M. Blau, Jason H. Pomerantz and Kostandin V. Pajcini has taken a possible first step toward unlocking the human ability to regenerate. By inactivating two genes that work to suppress tumors, they got mouse muscle cells to revert to a younger state, start dividing and help repair tissue.


In a second experiment, a different technique to regenerating a tissue was announced by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco to regenerate heart tissue by reprogramming heart tissue cells into heart muscle cells reported in the journal Cell:

A second, quite different approach to regenerating a tissue is reported in Friday’s issue of Cell by Deepak Srivastava and colleagues at the University of California, San Francisco. Working also in the mouse, they have developed a way of reprogramming the ordinary tissue cells of the heart into heart muscle cells, the type that is irretrievably lost in a heart attack.
The Japanese scientist Shinya Yamanaka showed three years ago that skin cells could be converted to embryonic stem cells simply by adding four proteins known to regulate genes. Inspired by Dr. Yamanaka’s method, Dr. Srivastava and his colleagues selected 14 such proteins and eventually found that with only three of them they could convert heart fibroblast cells into heart muscle cells.