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Fruit Flies Help Treat Brain Damage
Reported December 03, 2008
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Fruit flies may help lead to a new treatment
for children with brain-damaging disorders.
Researchers from Johns Hopkins University genetically modified flies to
exhibit symptoms of mucolipidosis type IV (ML4) -- a disease where nerve
cells die in the brain and elsewhere. They found the nerve cell death and
progression of the disease is linked to a build-up of toxic waste in cells.
And they were surprised to discover cell death is delayed by introducing
normal blood cells into the flies. This suggests bone marrow transplants may
help children affected by this disease and other related disorders.
Scientists already knew the ML4 disease is caused by loss of the human
TRPML1 protein which works in the membranes of the garbage-collector
organelles inside of cells - without TRPML, cells build up toxic contents
and eventually die.
“Essentially, putting TRPML back into blood cells ‘rescued’ the mutant flies
from symptoms of the disease,” researcher Craig Montell, Ph.D., Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine, was quoted as saying. “After a bit of
brainstorming, we came up with the idea that if putting TRPML back into
blood cells could do this in flies, maybe it could do so in other animals,
including people, using bone marrow transplants to reconstitute blood cells
with normal TRPML.”
The researchers are now using mice engineered with ML4 to see how they
respond to bone marrow transplantation.
SOURCE: Cell, 2008;135:838-851 |