PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Colitis in test mice responds to treatment with human umbilical cord-derived mensenchymal cells

2012-04-24
(Press-News.org) Tampa, Fla. (April. 23, 2012) –When laboratory mice were modeled with colitis and treated with human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal cells, the cells homed in on the inflamed colon and effectively ameliorated colitis, reported a study published in a recent issue of Cell Transplantation (20:9), now freely available on-line at http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/. According to study corresponding author Dr. Zhong Chao Han of the Institute of Hematology, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Peking Union of Medical Sciences, Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are two forms of inflammatory bowel diseases with uncertain etiologies. Their study was designed to determine if human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal cells (hUC-MSCs) would be therapeutic when transplanted to test mice modeled with acute colitis. "Emerging data has shown that MSCs have broad and potent immunosuppressive activities," said Dr. Han. "Our study found that systematic administration of hUC-MSCs effectively attenuated the clinical and pathological severity of the induced colitis by several disease parameters, including body weight loss and infiltration of inflammatory cells." Colitis was induced in the test animals by use of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS), which was found to induce high levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines. However, the increased expression of cytokines interleukin (IL)-23 and IL-17 was "significantly reversed by hUC-MSC infusion." "Although our study demonstrated that hUC-MSCs could inhibit the acute inflammatory process, the effect of the same treatment on chronic inflammation is an unknown and should be investigated," said Dr Han. Additionally, the researchers reported that once the hUC-MSCs migrated to the inflamed colon, they remained there for several weeks, indicating to the researchers that the hUC-MSCs were not only "responsive to the cues sent by the injured colon tissues" but were also "well tolerated, even in the xeno-transplantation setting." "Considering that hUC-MSCs can be readily isolated with no harm to donors and subsequently expanded rapidly in large quantities, they provide an excellent choice for future clinical applications," concluded Dr. Han and the study's co-authors. "This study provides preliminary evidence that umbilical cord derived mesenchymal stem cells acutely reduces the inflammation that causes colitis," said Dr. Shinn-Zong Lin, professor of Neurosurgery and superintendent at the China Medical University Hospital of Taichung, Taiwan. "The next step will be to see if long term benefit can also be demonstrated".

### Contact: Dr. Zhong Chao Han, Institute of Hematology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union of medical College, Tianjin, 288 Nan Jin Road 300020, P.R. China.
Tel. 86-22-66211206
Email tihzchan@public.tpt.tj.cn

Citation: Liang, L.; Dong, C.; Chen, X.; Fang, Z.; Xu, J.; Liu, M.; Zhang, X.; Gu, D. S.; Wang, D.; Du, W.; Zhu, D.; Han, Z. C. Human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells ameliorate mice trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS)-induced colitis. Cell Transplant. 20(9):1395-1408; 2011.

The Coeditor-in-chief's for CELL TRANSPLANTATION are at the Center for Neuropsychiatry, China Medical University Hospital, TaiChung, Taiwan, and the Diabetes Research Institute, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine. Contact, Shinn-Zong Lin, MD, PhD at shinnzong@yahoo.com.tw or Camillo Ricordi, MD at ricordi@miami.edu or David Eve, PhD at celltransplantation@gmail.com

News release by Florida Science Communications www.sciencescribe.net


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study suggests smoking, but not nicotine, reduces risk for rare tumor

2012-04-24
COLUMBUS, Ohio - New research confirms an association between smoking and a reduced risk for a rare benign tumor near the brain, but the addition of smokeless tobacco to the analysis suggests nicotine is not the protective substance. The study using Swedish data suggests that men who currently smoke are almost 60 percent less likely than people who have never smoked to develop this tumor, called an acoustic neuroma. But men in the study who used snuff, which produces roughly the same amount of nicotine in the blood as smoking, had no reduced risk of tumor development. "We ...

Study finds 'Western diet' detrimental to fetal hippocampal tissue transplants

2012-04-24
Tampa, Fla. (April. 23, 2012) – Researchers interested in determining the direct effects of a high saturated fat and high cholesterol (HFHC) diet on implanted fetal hippocampal tissues have found that in middle-aged laboratory rats the HFHC diet elevated microglial activation and reduced neuronal development. While the resulting damage was due to an inflammatory response in the central nervous system, they found that the effects of the HFHC diet were alleviated by the interleukin (IL)-1 receptor antagonist IL-1Ra, leading them to conclude that IL-Ra has potential use in ...

Medical 'lightsabers': Laser scalpels get ultrafast, ultra-accurate, and ultra-compact makeover

Medical lightsabers: Laser scalpels get ultrafast, ultra-accurate, and ultra-compact makeover
2012-04-24
WASHINGTON, April 23—Whether surgeons slice with a traditional scalpel or cut away with a surgical laser, most medical operations end up removing some healthy tissue, along with the bad. This means that for delicate areas like the brain, throat, and digestive tract, physicians and patients have to balance the benefits of treatment against possible collateral damage. To help shift this balance in the patient's favor, a team of researchers from the University of Texas at Austin has developed a small, flexible endoscopic medical device fitted with a femtosecond laser "scalpel" ...

Robots fighting wars could be blamed for mistakes on the battlefield

Robots fighting wars could be blamed for mistakes on the battlefield
2012-04-24
As militaries develop autonomous robotic warriors to replace humans on the battlefield, new ethical questions emerge. If a robot in combat has a hardware malfunction or programming glitch that causes it to kill civilians, do we blame the robot, or the humans who created and deployed it? Some argue that robots do not have free will and therefore cannot be held morally accountable for their actions. But University of Washington psychologists are finding that people don't have such a clear-cut view of humanoid robots. The researchers' latest results show that humans apply ...

New South Asia network to tackle 'massive' climate adaptation challenge

2012-04-24
KATHMANDU, NEPAL (24 April 2012)—Today, recognizing the knowledge gap between the existing evidence of climate change and adaptation on the ground, researchers in Asia launched a novel learning platform to improve agricultural resilience to changing weather patterns, and to reduce emissions footprint. The Climate Smart Agriculture Learning Platform for South Asia, established by the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), will improve communication between scientists, government officials, civil society and farmers on best "climate ...

Researchers study costs of 'dirty bomb' attack in L.A.

2012-04-24
A dirty bomb attack centered on downtown Los Angeles' financial district could severely impact the region's economy to the tune of nearly $16 billion, fueled primarily by psychological effects that could persist for a decade. The study, published by a team of internationally recognized economists and decision scientists in the current issue of Risk Analysis, monetized the effects of fear and risk perception and incorporated them into a state-of-the-art macroeconomic model. "We decided to study a terrorist attack on Los Angeles not to scare people, but to alert policymakers ...

A physician's guide for anti-vaccine parents

2012-04-24
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- In the limited time of an office visit, how can a primary care physician make the case to parents that their child should be vaccinated? During National Infant Immunization Week, a Mayo Clinic vaccine expert and a pediatrician offer suggestions for refuting three of the most common myths about child vaccine safety. Their article, The Clinician's Guide to the Anti-Vaccinationists' Galaxy, is published online this month in the journal Human Immunology. "Thousands of children are at increased risk because of under-vaccination, and outbreaks of highly ...

Letting go can boost quality of life

2012-04-24
Montreal, April 23, 2012 — Most people go through life setting goals for themselves. But what happens when a life-altering experience makes those goals become unachievable or even unhealthy? A new collaborative study published in Psycho-Oncology by Carsten Wrosch of Concordia University's Department of Psychology and Centre for Research in Human Development and Catherine Sabiston of McGill's Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education and the Health Behaviour and Emotion Lab found that breast cancer survivors who were able to let go of old goals and set new ones ...

IADR/AADR publish studies on severe early childhood caries – proposes new classification

2012-04-24
Alexandria, Va., USA – The International and American Associations for Dental Research have published two studies about dental caries in children. These articles, titled "Hypoplasia-Associated Severe Early Childhood Caries – A Proposed Definition" (lead author Page Caufield, New York University College of Dentistry) and "Deciduous Molar Hypomineralization and Molar Incisor Hypomineralization" (lead author M.E.C. Elfrink, Academic Centre for Dentistry, Amsterdam) discuss the definitions of dental caries susceptibility to the hypomineralization and hypoplasia. The study ...

Towards an agroforestry policy in Indonesia

2012-04-24
INDONESIA (23 April 2012) — The importance of collaboration among all research partners in agroforestry was recently emphasised at a historic workshop to develop a national strategy on agroforestry research in Indonesia. During the meeting, five key challenges facing agroforestry in Indonesia were also identified. The first challenge mentioned was the Government's partial approach to research, which translates into low adoption of research recommendations. Second, land tenure insecurity, particularly in State forest areas, leads to social conflict and degradation of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Asia steps into the global carbon cycle conversation

Residing in conservative states is impacting the mental health of US LGBTQIA+ students—national study suggests

Gene sequencing uncovers differences in wild and domesticated crops

Inaugural editorial of Sustainable Carbon Materials

Nostalgia is an asset in company acquisitions

Individuals should be held to account for environmental damage, say experts

Menopause misinformation is harming care, warn experts

Companies may be misleading parents with “outrageous claims” about banking baby teeth

Ozone will warm planet more than first thought

Tissue origami: Using light to study and control tissue folding

‘Cyborg jellyfish’ could aid in deep-sea research, inspire next-gen underwater vehicles

2022 Pacific volcano eruption made a deep dive into Alaska

International collaboration on nursing and midwifery in the Caribbean deemed a success, according to new study

AABB updates transfusion standards after another massive Carson study

UCF researcher helps confirm genetic restoration success for Florida panthers

High-salt diet inflames the brain and raises blood pressure, study finds

Updated lab guide equips researchers with modern tools to identify plant pathogens

Inflammation and aging: Looking through an evolutionary lens

With human feedback, AI-driven robots learn tasks better and faster

Urban civilization rose in Southern Mesopotamia on the back of tides

Parkinson’s disease risk increases with metabolic syndrome

What happened before the Big Bang?

First SwRI-owned office outside Texas opens in Warner Robins, Georgia

Ad hominem attacks are the most common way users confront content they perceive as wrong in comment sections beneath news videos, with over 40% of analyzed comments relying on reputation-based insults

California's dwarf Channel Island foxes mostly have relatively bigger brains than their larger mainland gray fox cousins, which may reflect island-specific evolutionary pressures

Extreme heat poses growing threat to our aging population

Researchers reverse autism symptoms in mice with epilepsy drugs

Few depressed teens getting treatment, study finds

Access to green space was a mental health lifeline during COVID-19 pandemic

New drug formulation turns intravenous treatments into a quick injection

[Press-News.org] Colitis in test mice responds to treatment with human umbilical cord-derived mensenchymal cells