Health -   

1
A technician holds a laboratory mouse at the Jackson Laboratory, Jan. 24, 2006, in Bar Harbor, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty) Matilda, a pet rat, was flown from Alberta to B.C. on Friday, April 16, 2010. She is now at a rescue centre in the Vancouver area.

Fountain of youth? Stem cells help slow aging in mice

Viewer

CTV News Video

Canada AM: A stem cell success
Johnny Huard of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine explains why researchers believe they have been able to slow the aging process in mice using stem cells, and discusses what it could mean for humans.

A A |  Email ThisEmail  | PrintComments (11) Facebook   

A technician holds a laboratory mouse at the Jackson Laboratory, Jan. 24, 2006, in Bar Harbor, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty) Matilda, a pet rat, was flown from Alberta to B.C. on Friday, April 16, 2010. She is now at a rescue centre in the Vancouver area.

Photos

A technician holds a laboratory mouse at the Jackson Laboratory, Jan. 24, 2006, in Bar Harbor, Maine. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

View Larger Image

Date: Tue. Jan. 3 2012 7:29 PM ET

Experimental research on mice is offering an intriguing glimpse into how stem cell treatments might one day help slow the aging process.

This new research was conducted on mice that had been bred to have progeria, a disorder that causes premature aging. Mice with the condition typically live only 21 to 28 days instead of the usual two years.

Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh took 17-day-old mice with progeria and injected them with stem cell-like cells called stem/progenitor cells that they had taken from the muscle tissue of younger, healthier mice.

Mice injected with these cells lived two to three times longer than expected.

The full results appear in the journal Nature Communications.

Progenitor cells are similar to stem cells in that they have can become many kinds of cells, but are more limited than stem cells and cannot divide and reproduce indefinitely. Their main role is to replace cells lost by normal cell death.

One of the researchers, Dr. Johnny Huard, a professor in the Departments of Orthopaedic Surgery and of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, at the Pitt School of Medicine, says he and his team were amazed with the results.

"We were mind boggled with this," Huard told CTV News.

"We had mice at 45 days and they looked so good, we thought the lab facility had mixed them up with the healthy mice," said Huard, who is also the director of the Stem Cell Research Center at Pitt.

He says some of the mice lived 75 days, which is three times as long as would be expected in mice with this advanced aging.

Not only did the treated mice live longer, they were also in better general health that the untreated mice with progeria.

Normally, mice with the condition lose muscle mass in their hind limbs as they age, and begin to tremble and move slowly and awkwardly. But the mice that got the shots of stem/progenitor cells were more like normal mice, and they grew almost as large.

As well, the researchers found new blood vessel growth in the brains and muscle of the treated mice, even though large numbers injected stem/progenitor cells weren't detected in those tissues. They did find small amounts of new stem cells in the organs of the mice, but their numbers were so low, "they could not explain the huge effect in these animals," Huard said.

The next step was to try to understand how the stem/progenitor cells were helping the mice.

The team conducted experiments in petri dishes in a lab, placing stem/progenitor cells alongside cells from aged mice animals. After a few days, they discovered the cells from the aged mice appear renewed.

Huard says that suggests the healthy cells secreted something in the dish that helped revive the older stem cells in the same dish. The team is conducting more research in hopes of better understanding the protein or substance that might have been secreted.

The research is all very new, but the team says, one day, it may be possible to slow biological decline using stem cells. There could come a time, for example, when an older adult could be injected with progenitor cells or stem cells that had harvested from their own body at age 20 and then re-injected into them.

That's a long way away, of course. For now, much more research is needed on both the short and long term effects of the treatments.

With files from CTV medical specialist Avis Favaro

Comments are now closed for this story

Doug ^^^ BC
said
0 0

LOL!!! I guess I agree with "Remarkable" in one sense.But maybe not for the same reasons. We have a planet that can't support the number of people living on it now.We can't control the growth of the human population.And there are serious questions about whether or not planet earth has enough resources to feed and clothe us all. Really.Is extending the lives of individuals as noble a goal as it is being portayed ? The question is a valid one,in my opinion.And I'm a person who is reluctant to leave this life without knowing how the human species and planet earth meet their end.That's what happens when scientists figure out how we got here in the first place.No one wants to leave until the rest of the story is told.


David Fraser Nanoose Bay Bc
said
0 0

I'm sure all the mice are extremely happy knowing that they will be living longer


Why do rats get the best?
said
0 0

I wish I was a rat. Cancer vaccines, youth vaccines. Wow, too bad scientists cant do for us what they can do for rats.


Joe Canadian
said
0 0

I love this stuff - it may never amount to anything but this is where science is at its best. To challenge what we know and unlock the mysteries of life is amazing!


One Canadian
said
0 0

I'm not sure how smart this is ? Do we really want more people living longer healthier lives? Think about the world food supply, today almost 1 billion out of 7 billions people are living hungry and have no food to eat tomorrow. What will happen when the population doubles, and people are living into their 100's. I guess more people would starve.


ericinwisconsin
said
0 0

Great! So now we have mice that live longer. It's the least we can do after making them all endure cancer research.


John Smith
said
0 0

I will be dead when they finally release some drug.


Remarkable
said
0 0

After living in this world and working your tail off day in and day out, who would want to stick around on this dying planet for longer then we have to. Of course I'm sure there are those who are within the ultra rich club who will want to do just that because they know they can't take it with them. As for me, I want to only stay as long as the Good Lord is going to allow me to stay and not a minute longer.


John Ball
said
0 0

Well, anything is better than a face lift with eye and nose jobs which eventually leads to you having the facial features of a cat. Ladies, nothing wrong with being a cougar but looking like one is just wrong! Face lifts start to show as you age. By 50 you will look like a cat. STOP IT!!


wally
said
0 0

I really like mice and applaud ways to extend their lifespans but I would like to see more research into extending human life .


Try some brain cell injection
said
0 0

These researchers have mind boggled themselves beyond common sense. It seems to escape them that is quite possible that the stem cell injection has only addressed the illness progeria, NOT the actual ageing process itself.


Share with your social Network:

Facebook DIGG Newsvine Delicious Twitter StumbeUpon Reddit Yahoo! Buzz

 

Advertisement

Contest

Subscribe!

MedNews Express newsletter

CTV MedNews Express

Sign up for our weekly medical newsletter, delivered for free to your inbox.

CTV.ca Blogs

Dr. Marla Shapiro

Health Blog

Check out what our guest medical experts and CTV health reporters are writing about.

Twitter

Avis Favaro Twitter

Follow us on Twitter

Follow CTV medical specialist Avis Favaro on Twitter.

Today's Health Stories

oxycontin

Saskatchewan joins push to stop funding OxyContin

More

Senior citizen

U.S. Alzheimer's strategy: Better treatment by 2025

More

CFIA generic

CFIA recalls cooked ham sold in Ontario and Quebec

More