Stem cell therapy for Parkinson’s disease
Researchers at Kyoto University’s Centre for iPS Cell Research and Application in Japan are moving ahead with the world’s first application of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to treat Parkinson’s disease.
The team, led by neurosurgeon Jun Takahashi, will now engage in a limited clinical trial to test the potential side effects.
Osaka based drug maker Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma Co Ltd has lined itself up to manufacture and start selling cellular medicine based on the data from these clinical trials by 2023.
This development comes as a number of clinical trials of iPS cell-based treatments are underway worldwide.
What is Parkinson’s disease?
Parkinson’s is a progressive neurological condition marked by tremors, muscular rigidity, and slow, imprecise movement.
This condition falls under “movement disorders” such as Cerebral Palsy, Ataxia, Huntington’s disease and many more which are know to worsen with time.
The treatment
Treatment will see scientists take iPSCs from healthy people, match them with patients, then induce the cells to become dopaminergic progenitors.
These progenitors will then be injected into a brain region – called the “putamen” – that is known to have a major part in the neural degeneration linked with Parkinson’s disease.
More than 5 million cells will be transplanted into patients then left to develop into neurons. These neurons can replace the dopamine lost due to the effects of Parkinson’s.
What is dopamine?
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter responsible for transmitting signals between nerve cells (neurons) in the brain.
Very few neurons make dopamine, and Parkinson’s disease leads to the death of many of those that do.
The decline in dopamine levels leads to Parkinson’s disease symptoms, such as shaking and loss of motor function.
The impact
The new treatment is not a cure for Parkinson’s disease and there is no apparent effect on damaged cognitive function.
However, it could offer a potentially longer-term treatment for the disease. Currently, patients with Parkinson’s receive oral dopamine medication but the benefits start to dwindle after about a decade.
Scientists have already engaged in a successful pre-clinical study using monkeys, which found that stem cell transplantation greatly improved motor function in the event of Parkinson’s disease.
Historically, there has been some concern that iPSCs cells could create cancer-forming cells but the test monkeys did not develop any malignant tumours within two years of their transplant.
About Parkinson’s
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Diagnoses set to rise by 1/5 by 2025
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Men are 1.5 times more likely to have Parkinson’s than women
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50 people diagnosed daily
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145,000 living with Parkinson’s in the UK
References:
Takahashi J. (2020). iPS cell-based therapy for Parkinson’s disease: A Kyoto trial. Regenerative therapy, 13, 18–22. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.reth.2020.06.002
Doi, D., Magotani, H., Kikuchi, T., Ikeda, M., Hiramatsu, S., Yoshida, K., Amano, N., Nomura, M., Umekage, M., Morizane, A., & Takahashi, J. (2020). Pre-clinical study of induced pluripotent stem cell-derived dopaminergic progenitor cells for Parkinson’s disease. Nature communications, 11(1), 3369. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17165-w
Schweitzer, J. S., Song, B., Herrington, T. M., Park, T. Y., Lee, N., Ko, S., Jeon, J., Cha, Y., Kim, K., Li, Q., Henchcliffe, C., Kaplitt, M., Neff, C., Rapalino, O., Seo, H., Lee, I. H., Kim, J., Kim, T., Petsko, G. A., Ritz, J., … Kim, K. S. (2020). Personalized iPSC-Derived Dopamine Progenitor Cells for Parkinson’s Disease. The New England journal of medicine, 382(20), 1926–1932. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1915872