‘Reprogrammed’ stem cells implanted into patient with Parkinson’s disease
Japanese neurosurgeons have
implanted ‘reprogrammed’ stem cells into the brain of a patient with
Parkinson’s disease for the first time.
The condition is only the
second for which a therapy has been trialled using induced pluripotent
stem (iPS) cells, which are developed by reprogramming the cells of body
tissues such as skin so that they revert to an embryonic-like state,
from which they can morph into other cell types.
Scientists at
Kyoto University use the technique to transform iPS cells into
precursors to the neurons that produce the neurotransmitter dopamine. A
shortage of neurons producing dopamine in people with Parkinson’s
disease can lead to tremors and difficulty walking.
In October,
neurosurgeon Takayuki Kikuchi at Kyoto University Hospital implanted 2.4
million dopamine precursor cells into the brain of a patient in his
50s. In the three-hour procedure, Kikuchi’s team deposited the cells
into 12 sites, known to be centres of dopamine activity. Dopamine
precursor cells have been shown to improve symptoms of Parkinson’s disease in monkeys.
Stem-cell
scientist Jun Takahashi and colleagues at Kyoto University derived the
dopamine precursor cells from a stock of IPS cells stored at the
university. These were developed by reprogramming skin cells taken from
an anonymous donor.
“The patient is doing well and there have
been no major adverse reactions so far,” says Takahashi. The team will
observe him for six months and, if no complications arise, will implant
another 2.4 million dopamine precursor cells into his brain.
The
team plans to treat six more patients with Parkinson’s disease to test
the technique’s safety and efficacy by the end of 2020.
Takahashi
says that if this trial goes well, they might have enough evidence for
the treatment to be sold to patients as early as 2023, under Japan's
fast-track approval system for regenerative medicines. “Of course it
depends on how good the results are,” he says.
In 2014, ophthalmologist Masayo Takahashi, Takahashi’s wife, created retinal cells from iPS cells that were used to treat eye disease.
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doi: 10.1038/d41586-018-07407-9
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