April
16 , 2007
Canadian Group Makes Nerve Cells From Skin
Francois Berthod at
Laval University in Quebec City
and colleagues say they’ve
isolated cells that can become mature
human neurons (nerve cells) from
human skin cells, with implications
for both research and treatment.
The investigators,
who published their findings in
the February issue of the Journal
of Cellular Physiology, say they
obtained skin cells from patients
who had undergone breast reduction
surgeries, grew them in plastic
lab dishes in an environment that
favors neuron development, and monitored
them for seven weeks.
During that time,
the cells went through the normal
nerve cell developmental stages,
producing proteins characteristic
of each stage. They also began to
form connections with each other,
as nerve cells normally do.
“We are now
trying to push the differentiation
[maturation] of these neurons into
a motor neuron fate,” says
Berthod, who has MDA support for
research in amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS). Motor neurons are
the cells affected in this disease.