Vision loss can be a side effect from stroke. Neurons don't regenerate, and stem cell therapy is costly, difficult, and chancy. Researchers have figured out a way to use gene therapy to recover lost vision after a stroke in a mouse model.
From:
Perdue University
October
2, 2021 -- Most strokes happen when an artery in the brain becomes blocked.
Blood flow to the neural tissue stops, and those tissues typically die. Because
of the locations of the major arteries in the brain, many strokes affect motor
function. Some affect vision, however, causing patients to lose their vision or
find it compromised or diminished. A research team led by Purdue University's
Alexander Chubykin, an associate professor of biological sciences in the
College of Science, in collaboration with the team led by Gong Chen at Jinan
University, China, has discovered a way to use gene therapy to turn glial brain
cells into neurons, restoring visual function and offering hope for a way to
restore motor function.
Neurons
don't regenerate. The brain can sometimes remap its neural pathways enough to
restore some visual function after a stroke, but that process is slow, it's
inefficient, and for some patients, it never happens at all. Stem cell therapy,
which can help, relies on finding an immune match and is cumbersome and
difficult. This new gene therapy, as demonstrated in a mouse model, is more
efficient and much more promising.
"We
are directly reprogramming the local glial cells into neurons," Chubykin
said. "We don't have to implant new cells, so there's no immunogenic
rejection. This process is easier to do than stem cell therapy, and there's
less damage to the brain. We are helping the brain heal itself. We can see the
connections between the old neurons and the newly reprogrammed neurons get
reestablished. We can watch the mice get their vision back."
Chubykin's
research is especially important because visual function is easier than motor
skills to measure accurately, using techniques including optical imaging in
live mice to track the development and maturation of the newly converted
neurons over the course of weeks. Perfecting and understanding this technique
could lead to a similar technique reestablishing motor function. This research
bridges the gap in understanding between the basic interpretation of the neurons
and the function of the organs.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/10/211002123006.htm
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