http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/science-technology/Adult-Stem-Cell-Research-Avoids-Ethical-Concerns-94507429.html
Scientists find they can be more useful than their embryonic counterparts
Imagine a world in which Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, arthritis, blindness, and blood
disorders are a thing of the past.
Unique cells known as stem cells could hold the key. Like magic seeds, they respond to built-in
genetic instructions to develop into bone cells, muscle cells, brain cells or any other type of
cell as the growing body takes form. Scientists believe these cells can also be used to treat
many different diseases.
But research in this field has raised ethical questions, especially at some religious
institutions. Researchers at a renowned Catholic university are working to find alternative ways
to exploit the healing power of these extraordinary cells.
In the 1960s, two Canadian scientists discovered that stem cells from developing human embryos
can regenerate tissue.
The finding raised the possibility of new treatments for diseases, like macular degeneration
and Alzheimer's, in which body tissues are destroyed and the only cure is to replace those
tissues.
Ethical conflict
However, these embryonic stem cells can only be harvested from living human embryos that have
been either naturally or purposely aborted.
That creates an ethical conflict for people of many religious faiths, including Catholics, who
consider embryos to be living beings, and their destruction, murder. It meant that researchers
at universities with religious affiliations, such as Notre Dame in Indiana, could not explore
this ground-breaking field.
So they looked for other ways to obtain and use stem cells that would not be morally
problematic. They turned to adult stem cells, which come from mature cells.
Finding an alternative
Many researchers argued that adult stem cells were not as adaptable as those from embryos, but
University of Notre Dame researcher David Hyde says they seem to be adapting quite well.
In a secure research facility, Hyde shows off a collection of more than 100,000 zebrafish. The
two-and-a-half centimeter long blue striped creatures swim in their tanks, oblivious to the
important role they're playing in retina research.
"All the fish are anesthetized before they're treated and most of the treatments involved
use extremely bright light, which kills off their rod and cone photoreceptor cells in the
retina," says Hyde.
Researchers know that the fish are blind because they do not swim away from simulated predators
like their sighted counterparts. However, adult stem cells in the eyes of the zebrafish
regenerate the damaged cells, restoring vision.
Hyde and his colleagues examine the stem cells under microscopes to try to determine how the
regeneration process works.
Hyde says zebrafish have a similar eye structure to humans, but the stem cells in our eyes do
not automatically regenerate.
Promising signs
"So we're ready to start to think about are these processes that we've identified in zebra
fish, are they working properly in humans? Or is there something that is blocking their ability
to function in humans, which would then correlate to the inability in the human retina to
regenerate."
Ideally, Hyde and his colleagues hope to identify the mechanism that zebrafish use to
regenerate their vision and apply the knowledge to humans.
Other stem cell researchers at Notre Dame are working with fruit flies to gain a better
understanding of the biochemical processes in blood production, which is critical to curing
blood diseases like leukemia or hemophilia. And mice are being used to research adult stem cells
in bone, cartilage, and fat to gain answers in treating arthritis and orthopedic diseases.
According to Hyde, adult stem cells have proved even more useful than their embryonic
counterparts in many ways.
"What we haven't been able to do is to take an embryonic stem cell, place it into a neural
tissue such as the retina and have it become specific types of cells that regenerate only the
damaged or missing cells," says Hyde. "That process of becoming a specific type of
cell is going to be extremely difficult whereas these adult stem cells that already reside in
that tissue seem to have already resolved that problem for us."
Cutting edge of adult stem cell research
While Notre Dame officials acknowledge that their university cannot compete with institutions
like Harvard and Stanford in the field of embryonic stem cell research, it is on the cutting
edge of adult stem cell research.
It's one of a growing number of American universities and institutions such as Wake-Forest in
North Carolina, the University of Maryland, and the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. Internationally,
groups in Great Britain, Mexico, Singapore, Sweden and South Korea are also involved in adult
stem cell research.
Notre Dame recently started an interdisciplinary adult stem cell initiative so faculty from its
biology, law and engineering departments can work together in the area. Historian and
philosopher Philip Sloan says the university is also looking into offering graduate training on
adult stem cell issues to humanities, law, and science students.
"It's important to be aware of that not simply in spite of our religious affiliation, but
because of a conception we have within the Catholic tradition of a need to interface science,
theology, faith, and reason and these questions, I think those are going to be important
signature that we can bring to this these discussions."
Next year, Notre Dame plans to host a workshop, bringing scientists and ethicists from around
the country together to discuss the future of adult stem cell research.
May 20 2010 (Voice of America)