Stem Cell Research and the Treatment of Neurodegenerative Diseases

In this open access review paper, the authors make a case for more human trials in the development of stem cell therapies to treat neurodegenerative diseases. An abundance of caution and heavy regulatory burden drives greater use of animal studies than is perhaps merited given the safety data derived from the first of those studies, which in turn leads to high cost and a high rate of failure in development. A more rapid move to human trials after proving safety in animals is one possible solution to this problem. Another is for large improvements in the quality and cost of on-demand growth of small brain tissue sections that exhibit specific disease characteristics, but even then it is still important to transition to human trials sooner after safety is proven rather than later.

Progress in the field of clinical research and medicine has decreased global mortality drastically. The developed countries have extended the life span of their aging population. However, the modern world is now faced with the issues of aging and age related disorders. Neurodegeneration and neurodegenerative disorders are one of the major health implications faced by the aging population. Neurodegenerative disorders have been thoroughly investigated using animal models, primary cultures, and post mortem human brain tissues. Though informative, these approaches have some limitations. Data obtained from animal models fails to directly correlate with that of humans because a rodent brain is not an exact mimic of a human brain. Despite being highly conserved evolutionarily, mammalian genomes are not identical. Therefore species difference prevents the animal data from successful validation during clinical field trials which poses a severe economic burden. Preclinical studies often do not efficiently translate to the clinic and the clinical trial failures have been reported time and again. Primary culture of neurons is challenging because these are the post mitotic differentiated cells which are difficult to sustain in the in-vitro conditions. Ethical constraints have held back human based research and thus the best possible source of human samples are the postmortem brain tissues. However, these autopsied samples depict the end stages of the disease and do not give much insight into the intricacies of the disease' developing stages. Researchers are not willing to subject the human beings to untested interventions, but the choices have been limited so far.

Majority of neurodegenerative disorders have been incurable (Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) so far but timely diagnosis can help in the management and symptom alleviation. However, researchers across the world are continuously striving to achieve the cure and hope to achieve fruitful results in the near future. Neurodegeneration studies are largely divided into two major categories. One is the experimental modeling strategy which allows for a comprehensive understanding of the disease such as the etiology, pathophysiology, genotypic-phenotypic interactions, symptomatic, and mechanistic insights. The second is the medical approach which deals with the treatment, therapy, and disease management. Stem cells and iPSCs find widespread application for both, disease modeling as well as transplantation and regenerative therapeutics. In the present review we shall discuss the applicability of stem cell research in the field of neurodegenerative disease modeling and provide the current updates of how stem cell and induced pluripotent stem cell based studies have been employed to address the diagnosis and therapy of the most common neurodegenerative disorders. We shall briefly touch upon the advances and preferable methodologies employing stem cell and iPSC culture such as the three dimensional (3D) culture which has revolutionized the current trend of in-vitro studies. The article intends to highlight the fact, that though animal based in-vivo research is absolutely necessary for the neuroscience research, one cannot wholly and solely depend upon it and human based stem cell driven research has and will open newer avenues for the neurodegenerative disorders′ modeling and treatment.

Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2016.00072

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