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Adult Stem Cells Selectively Delivered into the Eye and Used to Control
Angiogenesis by Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
La Jolla, CA. July 26, 2002 - A team of researchers from The Scripps Research
Institute (TSRI) has discovered a way to use adult bone marrow stem cells to
form new blood vessels in the eye or to deliver chemicals that will prevent the
abnormal formation of new vessels.
This technique, which involves injecting the stem cells into the eye, could
potentially be used to stimulate vessel growth and address inherited degenerations
of the retina in the first instance, and in the second, to treat ocular diseases
resulting from abnormal retinal angiogenesis, the aberrant growth of new blood
vessels in the eye, which is the leading cause of vision loss in the United States.
"This is very exciting," says Martin Friedlander, M.D., Ph.D., who led the
study. "We have shown that the cells can incorporate into the [degenerating]
vasculature and make it normal."
"And when loaded with antiangiogenics, they can selectively wipe out the
formation of new blood vessels."
Friedlander, who is Associate Professor in the Department of Cell Biology
and Chief of the Retina Service in the Division of Ophthalmology, Department
of Surgery at Scripps Clinic, has had a longstanding research program looking
at ways of treating eye diseases that result from abnormal angiogenesis.
Abnormal angiogenesis is the cause of visual loss in age-related macular
degeneration, where new blood vessels grow under the retina, and diabetic retinopathy,
where abnormal vessels grow on top of the retina. The end result is much the
same in these diseases - the normal structures for the transmission of light
to the back of the eye are lost, and vision is catastrophically impeded in many
of the tens of millions of Americans who suffer from them.
From Stem Cells To Vessels
Adult bone marrow stem cells are "pluripotent" which means they have the
potential to develop into a number of different cell types, such as red blood
cells, platelets, or lymphocytes. The group's basic technique starts with selecting
stem cells from the bone marrow that have the capability of becoming endothelial
cells, the major cell type lining blood vessels.
Normally, retinal vascular formation occurs late in human prenatal development,
when endothelial cells form a fine mesh of blood vessels in the back of the eye.
In diseases like macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy, aberrant vascular
formation occurs later in life.
The vascularization in both diseases involves endothelial cells working in
concert with another specialized cell - star-shaped cells called "astrocytes." These
astrocytes, when activated, act as a template for vessel formation.
During prenatal human development, activated astrocytes guide endothelial
cells into place where they can proliferate and form blood vessels. And later
in life, activated astrocytes can also act as a template for endothelial cells
to form blood vessels during angiogenesis.
Friedlander and his team found that they were able to target the activated
astrocytes with the stem cell in vivo. They then tested these stem cells
in a mouse model system of ocular disease. In normal mice, retinal blood vessels
form during the first three weeks after birth. In the disease model, the deeper
retinal vessels completely degenerate by one month after birth.
In the ocular disease models, the stem cells differentiated into endothelial
cells and proliferated, forming new blood vessels. This actually rescued and
stabilized the retinal vessels when they would otherwise be degenerated.
They also found that they could shut down the angiogenesis by first transfecting
the stem cells with a powerful inhibitor of angiogenesis - a fragment of the
human protein tryptophanyl- tRNA synthetase (T2-TrpRS), which was discovered
by the group of TSRI Professor Paul Schimmel, Ph.D., and described in an article
by Schimmel and Friedlander last year.
These transfected stem cells were also guided by the retinal astrocytes to
the vasculature in the back of the eye where they expressed the T2-TrpRS protein
and prevented the development of new retinal blood vessels without affecting
already established blood vessels.
The research article "Bone marrow-derived stem cells target retinal astrocytes
and can promote or inhibit retinal angiogenesis" is authored by Atushi Otani,
Karen Kinder, Karla L. Ewalt, Francella J. Otero, Paul Schimmel, and Martin Friedlander
and appears in the September, 2002 issue of Nature Medicine, appearing
online as part of the advance online publication section of the journal's web
site on July 29, 2002. See http://www.nature.com/nm/.
The research was primarily funded by the National Eye Institute with additional
support from The National Cancer Institute, The Skaggs Institute for Research,
The Robert Mealey Program for the Study of Macular Degenerations, Merck KgaA,
and the National Foundation for Cancer Research.
For more information contact:
Keith McKeown
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.8134
Fax: 858.784.8118
kmckeown@scripps.edu
Copyright © 2002 TSRI.
All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
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