(Press-News.org) COLUMBUS, Ohio – An experimental oral drug given to mice after a spinal cord injury was effective at improving limb movement after the injury, a new study shows.
The compound efficiently crossed the blood-brain barrier, did not increase pain and showed no toxic effects to the animals.
"This is a first to have a drug that can be taken orally to produce functional improvement with no toxicity in a rodent model," said Sung Ok Yoon, associate professor of molecular & cellular biochemistry at Ohio State University and lead author of the study. "So far, in the spinal cord injury field with rodent models, effective treatments have included more than one therapy, often involving invasive means. Here, with a single agent, we were able to obtain functional improvement."
The small molecule in this study was tested for its ability to prevent the death of cells called oligodendrocytes. These cells surround and protect axons, long projections of a nerve cell, by wrapping them in myelin. In addition to functioning as axon insulation, myelin allows for the rapid transmission of signals between nerve cells.
The drug preserved oligodendrocytes by inhibiting the activation of a protein called p75. Yoon's lab previously discovered that p75 is linked to the death of these specialized cells after a spinal cord injury. When they die, axons that are supported by them degenerate.
"Because we know that oligodendrocytes continue to die for a long period of time after an injury, we took the approach that if we could put a brake on that cell death, we could prevent continued degeneration of axons," she said. "Many researchers in the field are focusing on regeneration of neurons, but we specifically targeted a different type of cells because it allows a relatively long therapeutic window."
An additional benefit of targeting oligodendrocytes is that it can amplify the therapeutic effect because a single oligodendrocyte myelinates multiple axons.
A current acute treatment for humans, methylprednisolone, must be administered within eight but not after 24 hours after the injury to be effective at all. An estimated 1.3 million people in the United States are living with spinal cord injuries, experiencing paralysis and complications that include bladder, bowel and sexual dysfunction and chronic pain.
The experimental drug, called LM11A-31, was developed by study co-author Frank Longo, professor of neurology and neurological sciences at Stanford University. The drug is the first to be developed with a specific target, p75, as a potential therapy for spinal cord injury.
The research is published in the Jan. 9, 2013, issue of The Journal of Neuroscience.
Researchers gave three different oral doses of LM11A-31, as well as a placebo, to different groups of mice beginning four hours after injury and then twice daily for a 42-day experimental period. The scientists analyzed the compound's effectiveness at improving limb movement and preventing myelin loss.
The spinal cord injuries in mice mimicked those caused in humans by the application of extensive force and pressure, resulting in loss of hind-limb and bladder function and experimentally calibrated baseline difficulty in walking and swimming.
The researchers determined that the mice did not experience more pain than the placebo group at all the doses tested, suggesting that LM11A-31 does not worsen nerve pain after spinal cord injury.
Analysis showed that the extent of myelin sparing was dependent on the dose of the drug. Each dose – 10, 25 or 100 milligrams per kilogram of body weight – led to increasing myelin sparing, with the highest dose demonstrating the greatest effect.
The injury in the animals caused a loss of about 75 percent of myelinated axons in the lesion area in the placebo group. This loss was reduced so that myelinated axons reached more than half of the normal levels with LM11A-31 at 100 mg/kg. That was correlated with about a 50 percent increase in surviving oligodendrotcytes compared to those in the placebo group, Yoon said.
In behavior tests, only the highest dose of the compound led to improvements in motor function. Mice were tested in both weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing activities over the 42 days to evaluate their functional recovery.
Mice receiving the highest dose could walk with well-coordinated steps. In swimming tests, scientists saw similar improvements, with mice receiving the highest dose most able to coordinate hind-limb crisscross movement. The other treatment groups exhibited difficulty in walking and swimming.
Yoon said the findings may suggest that myelin sparing needs to reach a threshold of roughly 50 percent of normal levels before motor function improvements become measurable.
"The cellular analysis of the myelin profile detects small changes. Behavior is more complex, and we don't think functional behavior necessarily improves in a linear fashion," she said. "Still, these results clearly show that this is the first oral drug in spinal cord injury that works alone to improve function."
###
This work was supported by the grants from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) and the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation, and Ohio State Neuroscience Center Core support from NINDS.
Additional co-authors include Chhavy Tep, Tae Hee Lim, Pyung On Ko, Sami Getahun, Jae Cheon Ryu and Virginia Goettl of the Department of Molecular & Cellular Biochemistry; and Michele Basso of the Department of Physical Therapy, all at Ohio State; and Stephen Massa of the University of California, San Francisco.
Contact: Sung Ok Yoon.
Written by Emily Caldwell, 614-292-8310; Caldwell.151@osu.edu. END
A synthetic "poop" developed at the University of Guelph can cure nasty gastrointestinal infections caused by Clostridium difficile, a toxin-producing bacterium.
A study on the artificial stool was published today in the inaugural issue of Microbiome, a new peer-reviewed science journal.
The stool – a "super-probiotic" called RePOOPulate – was created by Guelph microbiologist Emma Allen-Vercoe to replace human fecal matter used in stool transplants, a known treatment for C. difficile.
She made the super-probiotic from purified intestinal bacterial cultures grown ...
An analysis of the first three years of data from NASA's Kepler mission, which already has discovered thousands of potential exoplanets, contains good news for those searching for habitable worlds outside our solar system.
It shows that 17 percent of all sun-like stars have planets one to two times the diameter of Earth orbiting close to their host stars, according to a team of astronomers from the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
This estimate includes only planets that circle their stars within a distance of about one-quarter ...
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- The hand-held scanners, or tricorders, of the Star Trek movies and television series are one step closer to reality now that a University of Missouri engineering team has invented a compact source of X-rays and other forms of radiation. The radiation source, which is the size of a stick of gum, could be used to create inexpensive and portable X-ray scanners for use by doctors, as well as to fight terrorism and aid exploration on this planet and others.
"Currently, X-ray machines are huge and require tremendous amounts of electricity," said Scott Kovaleski, ...
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– For decades, consensus among psychologists has held that a group of five personality traits –– or slight variations of these five –– are a universal feature of human psychology. However, a study by anthropologists at UC Santa Barbara raises doubt about the veracity of that five-factor model (FFM) of personality structure as it relates to indigenous populations. Their findings appear in the current issue of the American Psychological Association's Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Studying the Tsimane, an isolated indigenous group ...
Cambridge, Mass. - January 8, 2013 - At a time when communication networks are scrambling for ways to transmit more data over limited bandwidth, a type of twisted light wave is gaining new attention. Called an optical vortex or vortex beam, this complex beam resembles a corkscrew, with waves that rotate as they travel.
Now, applied physicists at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have created a new device that enables a conventional optical detector (which would normally only measure the light's intensity) to pick up on that rotation.
The ...
Testing medicines to prevent lung cancer requires treating many thousands of high-risk individuals and then waiting 5, 10 or 15 years to discover which of them develop cancer and which, if any, experience survival benefit from the treatment. A University of Colorado Cancer Center study recently published in the journal Cancer Prevention Research proposes a possible waypoint on the way to benefit, which if validated, could dramatically reduce the number of patients needed and time required to test drugs for lung cancer prevention.
"Chemoprevention is an important approach ...
ROSEMONT, Ill.—Female athletes are three times more likely to suffer from anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) ruptures, one of the most common knee injuries, compared to male athletes. The ACL is one of the four main ligaments within the knee that connect the femur (upper leg bone) to the tibia (lower leg bone). Recent research highlights the unique anatomical differences in the female knee that may contribute to higher injury rates, and should be taken into consideration during reconstructive surgery and sports training, according to a review article in the January 2013 issue ...
LA JOLLA, CA – January 8, 2013 - Chemists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have found an easier way to perform one of the most fundamental tasks in molecular biology. Their new method allows scientists to add a marker to certain cells, so that these cells may be easily located and/or selected out from a larger cell population.
The technique, which is described in a recent issue of the chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie International Edition, makes use of the tight binding of two proteins that are cheaply obtainable but are not found in human or other mammalian ...
Foreign invaders such as pythons and lionfish are not the only threats to Florida's natural habitat. The native Carolina Willow is also starting to strangle portions of the St. Johns River.
Biologists at the University of Central Florida recently completed a study that shows this slender tree once used by Native Americans for medicinal purposes, may be thriving because of water-management projects initiated in the 1950s. Canals were built to control runoff and provide water for agriculture. The unintended consequence -- stable water levels -- allowed Carolina Willow ...
New York children participating in a federal nutrition program had healthier eating behaviors and lower rates of obesity two years after improvements to the program were undertaken, according to a study published online today in Obesity, the official journal of the Obesity Society.
In 2009 all 50 states rolled out sweeping changes to the menu of foods available through the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, or WIC, which reaches nearly half of all infants born in the United States. New York was the first state in the nation to roll ...