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Cord Blood Cells Converted into Neurons

For more than 20 years, doctors have been using cells from blood that remains in the placenta and umbilical cord after childbirth to treat a variety of illnesses, from cancer and immune disorders to blood and metabolic diseases.  Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, from the Salk Institute for Biological Studies (California, USA), and colleagues have devised a new protocol:  using a single protein, known as a transcription factor-to convert cord blood (CB) cells into neuron-like cells that may prove valuable for the treatment of a wide range of neurological conditions, including stroke, traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury. The researchers used a retrovirus to introduce Sox2, a transcription factor that acts as a switch in neuronal development, into CB cells. After culturing them in the laboratory, they discovered colonies of cells expressing neuronal markers. Using a variety of tests, they determined that the new cells, called induced neuronal-like cells (iNC), could transmit electrical impulses, signaling that the cells were mature and functional neurons. Additionally, they transferred the Sox2-infused CB cells to a mouse brain and found that they integrated into the existing mouse neuronal network and were capable of transmitting electrical signals like mature functional neurons.  The study authors conclude that: “This system highlights the potential of [cord blood] cells and offers an alternative means to the study of cellular plasticity, possibly in the context of drug screening research and of future cell-replacement therapies.”

Alessandra Giorgetti, Maria C. N. Marchetto, Mo Li, Diana Yu, Raffaella Fazzina, Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, et al.  “Cord blood-derived neuronal cells by ectopic expression of Sox2 and c-Myc.” PNAS, July 18, 2012.

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