Contributed by Ron Gara| 10 October, 2004  22:16 GMT
Embryonic stem cells can restore the capacity of neighboring defective cells to function normally, according to a new study published in
Science.
Fifteen embryonic stem cells injected into early embryos of mice whose hearts were genetically predisposed to develop a lethal defect rescued the heart from developing the disorder, researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center report.
The stem cells not only produced normal daughter cells that were incorporated into the defective embryonic heart, but also released biological factors into the nearby vicinity. This prevented neighboring heart cells from developing into defective tissue, according to the researchers.
"In other words, stem cells act like nurses, restoring 'sick' cells to health" said Robert Benezra, PhD, a Member in the Cancer Biology and Genetics Program at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and the study's senior author. "The result was that 50 percent of the mice fated to die in the womb were born with healthy hearts."
In previous studies, Dr. Benezra and colleagues demonstrated a relationship between the presence of a specific protein called "Id" during embryonic growth and the normal development of capillaries and blood vessels. Mice engineered without this protein, called "Id knock-out" mice, display severe cardiac defects and die at mid-gestation.
"In this current study, with the repair of congenital heart defects in our Id knockout embryos, we observed that the stem cells provided normal signals to themselves and also to their neighbor cells to correct the organ as a whole," explained Diego Fraidenraich, PhD, the study's lead author.
The researchers also found a relationship between the Id protein and stem cells. "We found that stem cells are critically dependent on the Id protein for self-renewal and differentiation," added Dr. Benezra. "A reduction of just 15-20 percent of the Id protein impairs the stem cells' ability to rescue these embryonic mouse heart cells. These cells are very powerful, but also apparently very delicate."
The study was co-authored by Elizabeth E. Stillwell, PhD, Elizabeth E. Romero and Katia Manova, PhD, from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; and Craig T. Basson, MD, PhD, and David Wilkes, PhD, from Weill Medical College of Cornell University. |
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