Belgian researchers have identified a new strategy for treating an
inherited form of dementia after attempting to turn stem cells derived
from patients into the neurons most affected by the disease. In
patient-derived stem cells carrying a mutation predisposing them to
frontotemporal dementia, which accounts for about half of dementia cases
before the age of 60, the scientists found a targetable defect that
prevents normal neurodevelopment. These stem cells partially return to
normal when the defect is corrected.
The study appears in the December 31st issue of Stem Cell Reports, the official journal of the International Society of Stem Cell Research published by Cell Press.
"Use of induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology"--which
involves taking skin cells from patients and reprogramming them into
embryonic-like stem cells capable of turning into other specific cell
types relevant for studying a particular disease--"makes it possible to
model dementias that affect people later in life," says senior study
author Catherine Verfaillie of KU Leuven.
Frontotemporal disorders are the result of damage to neurons in parts
of the brain called the frontal and temporal lobes, gradually leading
to behavioral symptoms or language and emotional disorders. Mutations in
a gene called progranulin (GRN) are commonly associated with
frontotemporal dementia, but GRN mutations in mice do not mimic all the
features of the human disorder, which has limited progress in the
development of effective treatments.
"iPSC models can now be used to better understand dementia, and in
particular frontotemporal dementia, and might lead to the development of
drugs that can curtail or slow down the degeneration of cortical
neurons," Verfaillie says.
Verfaillie and Philip Van Damme of the Leuven Research Institute for Neuroscience and Disease explore this approach in the Stem Cell Reports
study by creating iPSCs from three patients carrying a GRN mutation.
These immature cells were impaired at turning into mature, specialized
cells called cortical neurons--the most affected cell type in
frontotemporal dementia.
One of the top defective pathways in the iPSCs was the Wnt signaling
pathway, which plays an important role in neuronal development. However,
genetic correction or treatment with a compound that inhibits the Wnt
signaling pathway restored the ability of the iPSCs to turn into
cortical neurons. Taken together, the findings demonstrate that the GRN
mutation causes the defect in cortical neuron formation by altering the
Wnt signaling pathway.
"Our findings suggest that signaling events required for
neurodevelopment may also play major roles in neurodegeneration," Van
Damme says. "Targeting such pathways, as for instance the Wnt pathway
presented in this study, may result in the creation of novel therapeutic
approaches for frontotemporal dementia."
The researchers will now work to better understand what goes wrong in
GRN-mutated cells, as well as identify precise molecular targets that
could then be used for drug screens.
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