StemCellsChina.com

Fill out my online form.
Study Shows Isolation Of Stem Cells May Lead To A Treatment For Hearing Loss Imprimer Envoyer
Hearing
Lundi, 09 Avril 2007 08:00
There are no translations available.


Source: Medical News Today

Have you ever walked by someone listening to their i-Pod loud enough for you recognize the song? Studies have shown noise-induced hearing loss is going to become the next big epidemic affecting our younger generation though the effects won't show until it is too late to treat. In addition to loud noise, certain cancer drugs or genetic factors can cause hearing loss in humans due to loss or faulty development of the sensory 'microphones' (hair cells) inside the ear - the cochlea. Lost hair cells are not replaced and people exposed to these conditions face permanent hearing loss. Identification of the stem cells from the adult cochlea would be a major step forward to develop new therapeutic approaches to hearing loss.

Members of the National Center for Regenerative Medicine research team, Dr. Robert Miller and Dr. Kumar Alagramam, both of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, recently published research findings in Developmental Neuroscience which suggest new ways of treating hearing loss. These researchers have isolated "cochlear stem cells" located in the inner ear and already primed for development into ear-related tissue due to their proximity to the ear and expression of certain genes necessary for the development of hearing. "Previous work in our lab with young-adult mouse cochlear tissue showed expression of genes normally found in stem cells and neural progenitors. This led us to hypothesize that cochlea harbors stem cells and neural precursor cells. Our work in collaboration with Miller's lab supports our hypothesis" Dr. Alagramam said. They say that in early life, these precursor cells may be able to regenerate hair cells, but their capacity to do so becomes limited as the ear develops and ages. The team's research is a major step in devising a therapy to reverse permanent hearing loss because it may lead to the activation of cochlear stem cells in the inner ear to regenerate new hair cells. "Clearly we have miles to go before we reach our end goal, but the exciting part is now we can test compounds that could promote regeneration of hair cells from these precursor cells in vitro, we can study the genes expressed during the transition from stem cells to hair cells, and we can think of developing strategies for cell replacement, i.e. transplanting these cochlear stem cells into the adult cochlea to affect hair cell replacement in the mouse, by extension, in humans" remarked Dr. Alagramam.

In this paper, Drs. Miller and Alagramam offer further evidence for the existence of cochlear stem cells in the mouse cochlea by confirming the ability to form 'stem cell' spheres in culture and by characterizing these cells in terms of neural and hair cell development using a panel of stem cell development and hair cell markers. The formation of spheres from early postnatal cochlear tissues and their expression of a wide range of developmental markers unique to hair cells confirm the possibility that self-supporting hair cell precursors exist in or can be derived from the postnatal mammalian cochlea.

Currently there are no clinical treatments to repair these hair cells vital to normal hearing. In the United States, 30% of people over the age of 65 have a handicapping hearing loss and of those, one in 500 people become deaf before reaching adulthood. In most cases, the target is the highly specialized hair cells. Docked inside the spiral duct of the human cochlea are ~15,000 hair cells, which are highly specialized neuroepithelial cells that enable us to hear a violin or a whisper. These hair cells differ in length by minuscule amounts and are set in motion by specific frequencies of sound. We hear this sound because this motion induces the hair cell to release an electrical impulse which passes along the auditory nerve to the brain. If the sound is too loud, the hair cells are damaged and no longer send signals to the brain. Severely damaged hair cells do not repair themselves nor do they regenerate naturally.

While further research is necessary, the researchers believe these precursor cells have the potential to regenerate the damaged hair cells and restore normal hearing. The team has already begun animal studies to explore the use of cochlear stem cells in well-established hair cell ablation models and in deaf mouse mutants with predictable patterns of early hair cell loss. This line of research will evaluate the in vivo survival and differentiation of self-renewing cochlear cell populations and potentially lead to new therapies for the numerous individuals that are going to suffer from noise-induced hearing loss in the near future.

About the National Center for Regenerative Medicine

The National Center for Regenerative Medicine (NCRM; www.ncrm.us) in Cleveland, OH., brings together researchers and physicians from Case Western Reserve University, the Cleveland Clinic, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Athersys, Inc., and The Ohio State University. The NCRM provides a comprehensive approach, including basic and clinical research as well as biomedical and tissue engineering, to develop new adult (non-embryonic) stem cell therapies for patients suffering from chronic and debilitating diseases including heart disease, cancer, genetic disorders and neurodegenerative diseases and injuries such as multiple sclerosis and spinal cord injury.

Mise à jour le Mardi, 10 Avril 2007 19:03
 

Recherche Sur le Site

Experiences de Patients

ALS - Mr. Reynolds
ALS - Ms. Brooks
Ataxia - Mr. Arruda
Ataxia - Mr. Blair
Ataxia - Ms. Crowter
Ataxia - Ms. Graf
Ataxia - Ms. Gray
Ataxia - Ms. Jones
Ataxia - Mr. K. Graf
Ataxia - Mr. Knoblauch
Ataxia - Mr. Martin
Ataxia - Mr. Nate
Ataxia - Mr. P. Flynn
Ataxia - Mr. R. Flynn
Ataxia - Mr. T. Graf
Ataxia - Mr. Wallace
Autism - Mr. Lachlan
Autism - Ms. Maria
Autism - Mr. Pacis
Autism - Mr. Wang
Autism - Mr. Yu
Batten Disease - Mr. Dell'Aringa
Brain Injury - Mr. Anduha
Brain Injury - Mr. Ashton
Brain Injury - Mr. Blazevic
Brain Injury - Mr. Cui
Brain injury - Mr. Hayward
Brain Injury - Ms. McAfee
Brain Injury - Mr. Nguyen
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Andrew Ricci
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Bocskai
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Boles
Cerebral Palsy - Ms. Caprioru
Cerebral Palsy - Ms. Ella
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Gryphon
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Lawrence
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Nicholas
Cerebral Palsy - Ms. Sosa
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Teskey
Cerebral Palsy - Ms. Tahiliani
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Phang
Cerebral Palsy - Mr. Will
Epilepsy - Ms. Madura
Epilepsy - Ms. Pinczker
Friedriech's Ataxia - Ms. Maher
Friedriech's Ataxia - Mr. Zachary
Glut1- DS - Ms. Jordan
Heart Disease - Mr. Maxwell
Huntington's - Ms. Arroyo
ION - Mr. Stevens
Muscular Dystrophy - Mr. Russ
MS - Ms. Chen
MS - Mr. Frey
MS - Ms. Glenn
MS - Ms. Helm
MS - Ms. Kay
MS - Mr. Kenneth
MS - Mr. Ozzello
MS - Ms. Sprague
ONH - Ms. Barlett
ONH - Ms. Hallie
ONH - Mr. Justin
ONH - Mr. Lawrence
ONH - Ms. Lilli
ONH - Ms. Manuela
MSA - Mr. Haywood
Parkinson's - Mr. Buckley
Parkinson's - Mr. Brown
Parkinson's - Mr. Budiono
Parkinson's - Ms. Chin
Parkinson's - Mr. Devlin
Parkinson's - Ms. Edwards
Parkinson's - Ms. Kluber
Parkinson's - Ms. Rouen
Parkinson's - Ms. Thomas
Parkinson's - Mr. Woodward
ROP - Shirdesh
ROP - Tatyana
Rett Syndrome - Ms. Laura
SMA - Ms. Gologan
SMA - Mr. Justin
SMA - Ms. Loredana
SMA - Ms. Nicole
SMA - Ms. Nirma
SOD - Claire
SOD - Ms. Frenette
SOD - Ms. Giulia
SOD - Ms. Megan
SOD - Mr. Peterson
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Aldrich
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Allen
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Ben
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Carson
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Iordache
Spinal Cord Injury - Ms. Jennifer
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Maricelli
Spinal Cord Injury - Ms. Pai
Spinal Cord Injury - Ms. Radu
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Savage
Spinal Cord Injury - Mr. Zuo
Stroke - Ms. Hollis
Stroke - Ms. Jing
Stroke - Mr. Li
Stroke (Child) - Ms. Farkas
Stroke (Infant) - Ms. Grecsó
Stroke (Infant) - Mr. Hildko