Why is adult stem cell research so important to our health? Reports are coming out on a daily basis showing that adult stem cells have the potential to regenerate and repair injured and damaged tissues throughout our body. Read more about many adult stem cell successes here, [and about one very special adult stem cell success story. http://www.herbalnutrition-for-naturalhealth.com/adult-stem-cell-success.html) - Rivka, ???]
The Variety of Stem Cells
Although some ambiguity or overlap exists in the naming of adult stem cells, depending on their tissue of origin and generative potential, these cells are found throughout the body and several types have been specifically identified by name:
- hematopoietic stem cells from the bone marrow (HSC)
- mesenchymal stem cells (MSC)
- adipose stem cells from fat tissue (ASC)
- connective tissue progenitors (CTP)
- multi-potent adult stem cells (MAPC)
- neural stem cells/oligodendrocyte progenitors from the central nervous system (NSC)
- skeletal myoblasts from the musculoskeletal system (SKMB)
- umbilical cord blood derived stem cells (UCB)
- hemangioblasts (AC133) from umbilical cord blood (HB1)
Whether each of these stem cell populations has the same plasticity and developmental potential as the others remains to be determined.
What we do know already is that bone marrow derived adult stem cells have a huge potential to benefit tissues and organ systems throughout the body through a variety of mechanisms.
Polysialic Acid
We do know that one of the essential molecules that plays a key role in stem cell plasticity is polysialic acid. Polysialic acid (PSA) is an essential carbohydrate component of cell membranes during brain development and also in cancer formation. It is a linear homopolymer of acetylneuraminic acid - in other words, a long, unbranched chain of repeating sugar molecules.
PSA attaches to another molecule, usually a neural cell adhesion molecule called NCAM, which is located in the cell membrane of many neural progenitor cells (young nerve cells and neural stem cells) in the central nervous system.
The function of PSA: PSA is generated by enzymes called (poly)sialyltransferases that add neuraminic acid (sugar monomers) to the end of a growing PSA chain. PSA can have up to 200 sugar monomers! So we can imagine, for the purpose of illustration, that a round cell has hundreds of NCAM molecules on its surface, and attached to each of these anchors is a long, wiggly string of PSA, like hair covering the cell.
This way, it's easy to understand that cells with PSA-NCAM will have a harder time interacting with other cells covered with PSA-NCAM. So, among other functions, PSA inhibits the interaction of cells with each other because of the long spikes of PSA holding them apart.
This property has major implications for how expression of PSA on the surface of a cell affects its behavior. Given the fact that cells can rapidly turn the expression of PSA 'ON' or 'OFF', polysialic acid can serve as a versatile regulator of a cell's activities. [More on this below... Rivka ??]
History of early research on PSA: A search of the scientific literature reveals over 600 articles on PSA, and rapidly counting. Like most areas of scientific research, work on PSA has been full of surprises and fascinating discoveries. To summarize all of this work is beyond the scope of this brief review, but we will try to pick the most interesting highlights.
PSA was first identified in 1979 as surface polymers on the coating of the E. coli bacterium. In the early 1980's, researchers studying bacteria that cause meningitis (inflammation of the membranes surrounding the brain) noticed similarities between molecules on the bacteria and molecules in the brain itself. And, true enough, further experiments revealed the existence of enzymes that synthesize polysialic acid and attach it to NCAM.
The Role of PSA in Brain Development and Regeneration: Because of the versatility of PSA expression on cells, this molecule plays a significant role in many different processes in development. Importantly, very recent research (Glaser et al. Stem Cells, 12/07) indicates that among migrating neural progenitor cells, those expressing high levels of PSA have an enhanced ability to respond to guidance cues in the brain tissue. [To be continued....Rivka??)
The Role of PSA in Cancer Formation: In cancer, mutations in genes encoding for sialyltransferases that synthesize PSA can contribute to mis-expression of PSA on the surface of cells. As we have seen above in neural development, changes in PSA expression alter a cell's ability to interact with other cells. In cancer that metastasizes and spreads, a lack of cell adhesion and increased mobility is at the heart of cell spreading to other areas. [To be continued...Rivka??)
Current stem cell research is now being taken from the laboratory bench to the patient's bedside. Many of these therapies are still in the experimental stages, whereas others haven't made it yet to the clinic.
If you have health concerns and don't wish to wait a few years or spend thousands of dollars for a stem cell transplant, contact us to find out how you can stimulate the release of your own adult stem cells NOW!
Here we will simplify the bewildering number and overwhelming detail of scientific articles and research results by dividing them into organ systems and diseases, as you see below.
Conditions Treatable with Adult Stem Cells
[Roy, The plan is to have another Tier 2 page for each of the diseases listed. This is where I’ve fallen behind and need to get caught up for the site to be more complete.- Rivka??]
- Alzheimer's Disease
- Autism
- Autoimmune Diseases
- Cerebral Palsy
- Crohn's Disease
- Diabetes, Type I and Type II
- Heart disease
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Osteoarthritis/Rheumatoid arthritis
- Parkinson's Disease
- Renal (Kidney) Failure
- Spinal Cord Injury
- Stroke
- Traumatic Brain Injury
Search for 'Any Disease' and 'Adult Stem Cell Research' on PubMed.
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