“Wide-ranging applications for pluripotent stem cells”
By JoanneRUSSELL25
The Hindu Shinya Yamanaka, Centre for iPS Cell Research and Application, Japan delivering a lecture in Chennai on Thursday. Photo: V. Ganesan
Many more diseases can be targeted, says expert
While applications of induced pluripotent stem cells in stem cell therapy may be limited to a few diseases, its applications in drug discovery are wide-ranging, and many more diseases can be targeted, Shinya Yamanaka, Director, Centre for iPS Cell Research and Application, Japan, has said.
The Japanese scientist, whose breakthrough was the creation of embryonic-like stem cells from adult skin cells, believes that the best chance for stem cell therapy lies in offering hope to those suffering from a few conditions, among them, macular disease, Type 1 Diabetes, and spinal cord injuries.
On the other hand, there were multiple possibilities with drug discovery for a range of diseases, and Prof. Yamanaka was hopeful that more scientists would continue to use iPS for studying this potential.
He currently serves as the Director of the Center for iPS Cell Research and Application and as Professor at the Institute for Frontier Medical Sciences at Kyoto University. He is also a Senior Investigator at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) – affiliated J. David Gladstone Institutes.
An invited speaker of the CellPress-TNQ India Distinguished Lectureship Series, co-sponsored by Cell Press and TNQ Books and Journals, Prof. Yamanaka spoke to a Chennai audience on Tuesday evening about those “immortal” cells, that he originally thought would take “forever” to create, but actually took only six years.
“My fixed vision for my research team was to re-programme adult cells to function like embryonic-like stem cells. I knew it could be done, but just didn't know how to do it,” Prof. Yamanaka said.
Embryonic stem cells are important because they are pluripotent, or possess the ability to differentiate into any other type of cell, and are capable of rapid proliferation. However, despite the immense possibilities of that, embryonic cells are a mixed blessing: there are issues with post-transplant rejection (since they cannot be used from a patient's own cells), and many countries of the world do not allow the use of human embryos.
Dr. Yamanaka's solution would scale these challenges if only he and his team could find a way to endow non-embryonic cells with those two key characteristics of embryonic stem cells.
In 2006, he and his team of young researchers — Yoshimi Tokuzawa, Kazutoshi Takahashi and Tomoko Ishisaka — were able to show that by introducing four factors into mouse skin cells, it was possible to generate ES-like mouse cells. The next year, they followed up that achievement, replicating the same strategy and converted human skin cells into iPS cells. “All we need is a small sample of skin (2-3millimetres) from the patient. This will be used to generate skin fibroblasts, and adding the factors, they can be converted to iPS cells. These cells can make any type of cell, including beating cardiac myocytes (heart cells), Prof.Yamanaka explained.
iPS cells hold out for humanity a lot of hope in curing diseases that have a single cell cause. Prominent among them are Lou Gehrig's Disease or Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as motor neuron disease. Motor neurons degenerate and die, and no effective treatment exists thus far. One reason is that there have not been good disease models for ALS in humans. It is difficult to get motor neuron from human patients and motor neurons cannot divide.
“Now, iPS cells can proliferate and can be differentiated to make motor neurons in large numbers,” he explained. Already a scientist in Japan has clarified motor neuron cells from iPS. “We are hoping that in the near future we would be able to evolve drug candidates that will be useful for ALS patients.” Treatment of spinal cord injuries using iPS cells has showed good results in mice and monkey specimens, and it is likely that in two or three years, scientists will be ready to start treatment for humans.
Toxicology, or drug side effects, is another area where iPS cells can be of use. Testing drug candidates directly on patients can be extremely dangerous. However, iPS cells can be differentiated into the requisite cell type, and the drugs tested on them for reactions. And yet, as wonderful as they may seem, iPS cells do have drawbacks, and there are multiple challenges to be faced before the technology can be applied to medicine. Are they equivalent and indistinguishable from ES cells? For a technology that has been around for only five years, the questions remain about safety. Also to derive patient-specific iPS cells, the process is time, and money-consuming, Prof. Yamanaka pointed out.
There are however, solutions in the offing, for the man who made the world's jaw drop with his discovery. One would be to create an iPS cell bank, where iPS cells could be created in advance from healthy volunteers donating peripheral blood, and skin fibroblasts, apart from frozen cord blood. The process of setting a rigorous quality control mechanism to select the best and safest iPS clones is on and would be complete within a year or two. “Many scientists are studying iPS cells across the world, and I'm optimistic that because of these efforts, we can overcome the challenges of iPS, and contribute to newer treatments for intractable diseases,” Prof. Yamanaka said.
N. Ram, Director, Kasturi & Sons Limited, introduced the speaker. Mariam Ram, managing director, TNQ India; and Emilie Marcus, executive editor, Cell Press, spoke.
Follow this link:
URL: http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/article2851466.ece
Related Post
- Improved adult-derived human stem cells have fewer genetic changes than expected - May 2nd, 2012
- How to Make a Broken Heart Mend Itself - April 29th, 2012
- VistaGen Secures Key U.S. Patent Covering Stem Cell Technology Methods Used to Test Drug Candidates for Liver Toxicity - April 25th, 2012
- IBN Discovers Human Neural Stem Cells, Promising Discovery For Breast Cancer Therapy - April 22nd, 2012
- IBN Discovers Human Neural Stem Cells with Tumor Targeting Ability - A Promising Discovery for Breast Cancer Therapy - April 22nd, 2012
- Scientists discover neural stem cells with tumour targeting ability - April 22nd, 2012
- Human neural stem cells with tumor targeting ability discovered - April 22nd, 2012
- :: 20, Apr 2012 :: IBN DISCOVERS HUMAN NEURAL STEM CELLS WITH TUMOR TARGETING ABILITY – A PROMISING DISCOVERY FOR ... - April 22nd, 2012
- Scientists discover tumor-targeting neural stem cells - April 22nd, 2012
- Cellular Dynamics Expands Distribution Agreement with iPS Academia Japan, Inc. to Include Distribution of iCell ... - March 28th, 2012
- New experimental technique can produce cells with specific functions - March 15th, 2012
- Gut Cells Turned To Insulin Factories - New Type l Diabetes Treatment - March 14th, 2012
- Study demonstrates cells can acquire new functions through transcriptional regulatory network - March 14th, 2012
- Columbia Researchers Find Potential Role for Gut Cells in Treating Type I Diabetes - March 12th, 2012
- A new approach to treating type I diabetes? Gut cells transformed into insulin factories - March 12th, 2012
- Gut cells transformed into insulin factories 'could help to treat type I diabetes' - March 12th, 2012
- New approach to treating type 1 diabetes? Transforming gut cells into insulin factories - March 12th, 2012
- Presentations at the Society of Toxicology Annual Meeting Demonstrate Superior Predictivity of Cellular Dynamics ... - March 8th, 2012
- albuterol adverse effects - Video - February 21st, 2012
- Horizon in new super-cell elite - February 16th, 2012
- Research and Markets: Primary and Stem Cells: Gene Transfer Technologies and Applications - February 15th, 2012
- Radiation treatment transforms breast cancer stem cells into new iBCSCs - February 15th, 2012
- Radiation therapy transforms breast cancer cells into cancer stem cells - February 14th, 2012
- Life Technologies Scientist Uma Lakshmipathy presents, "Solving Challenges in the Generation of Induced Pluripotent ... - February 14th, 2012
- Radiation treatment generates cancer stem cells from less aggressive breast cancer cells, study suggests - February 14th, 2012
- Radiation Treatment Generates Cancer Stem Cells from Less Aggressive Breast Cancer Cells - February 14th, 2012
- Radiation treatment transforms breast cancer cells into cancer stem cells - February 14th, 2012
- Uttar Pradesh govt sets up 2 member committee to resolve IPS-IAS dispute - February 6th, 2012
- EC transfers Basti Commissioner to pacify agitating IPS officers - February 6th, 2012
- Skin cells turned into neural precusors, bypassing stem-cell stage - January 31st, 2012
- Researchers turn skin cells into neural precusors, bypassing stem-cell stage - January 31st, 2012
- Stanford scientists turn skin cells into neural precusors, bypassing stem-cell stage - January 31st, 2012
- Professor Alan Trounson - World focus on stem cell research - Video - January 27th, 2012
- Experts comment on successful stem cell therapy for blindness - January 25th, 2012
- First Patients Shown to Improve with Embryonic Stem Cells - January 24th, 2012
- Stem cell treatment improves eyesight - January 24th, 2012
- Food Matters: Advancements continue to be made in stem cell research - January 20th, 2012
- Parkinson's Disease: Advancing Stem Cell Therapies - 2011 CIRM Grantee Meeting - Video - January 20th, 2012
- Uni to research childhood cancers - January 9th, 2012
- Positive results from BioCryst's BCX4208 Phase 2b study on gout - January 9th, 2012
a-few-diseases , a-small-sample , application , books , california , director , factors , institute , japan , prof- , speaker , technology 


February 2nd, 2012