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Bone Marrow Stem Cell Therapy Studied

Posted on: Tuesday, 5 September 2006, 15:00 CDT

European scientists say excessive stimulation of bone marrow stem cells in mice leads to severe anemia and ultimately death.

The scientists -- Claus Nerlov at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Monterotondo, Italy, and Achim Leutz at the Max-Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine Tumorigenesis and Differentiation in Berlin -- say hematopoietic stem cells residing in the bone marrow give rise to all blood cells circulating in the body.

To ensure a lifelong supply of blood cells, those stem cells must continuously self-renew. Previous work revealed stem cells require a signaling molecule called Wnt to activate beta-catenin, a protein involved in self-renewal.

Now research from the two groups of scientists show excessive beta-catenin signals lead, instead, to a loss of stem cells and problems in blood cell development. Mice expressing a mutant form of beta-catenin engineered to be permanently switched on, died at a very young age due to defects in blood cell production.

The study appears in the October issue of the journal Nature Immunology.


Source: United Press International

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