Audio By Carbonatix
US researchers have for the first time encouraged substantial regrowth in nerves controlling voluntary movement after spinal cord injury.
By manipulating an enzyme involved in cell growth, researchers were able to regenerate spinal cord nerves in mice, Nature Neuroscience reports.
It follows similar work on repairing the optic nerve to restore sight.
UK experts said the next challenge would be to turn the findings into a treatment suitable for humans.
The ability to grow new nerve cells is present at birth but then diminishes with age.
It means that after injury or illness to the spine such cells, known as axons, cannot regenerate.
In the latest study the researchers attempted to switch back on the signalling pathway that encourages this new growth in young mammals.
They did it by knocking out a gene called PTEN in mice which in normal circumstances puts a halt on new nerve growth.
The team, from Harvard Medical School and the University of California, Irvine, reported substantial regrowth in severed spinal cords in the animals.
They are now working on tests to see if the technique can actually restore spinal cord function.
Potential treatment
Study author Professor Oswald Steward said: "Until now, such robust nerve regeneration has been impossible in the spinal cord.
"Paralysis and loss of function from spinal cord injury has been considered untreatable, but our discovery points the way toward a potential therapy to induce regeneration of nerve connections following spinal cord injury in people."
Professor James Fawcett, head of clinical neuroscience at Cambridge University, said there was an awful lot of work going on in this area and the results were exciting.
But he pointed out: "It seems to work in young mice but we need to see what happens in older mice.
"We need to make it clear that this is not ready for human patients."
Dr Michael Coleman, from The Babraham Institute in Cambridge added that the challenge would be taking the results and turning them into a treatment that could be used in humans.
"Finding drugs to block the same pathway would be one approach as even gene therapy, which is highly experimental, could not easily 'remove' a gene as they have done so here."
Credit: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Awerco Construction threatens legal action over Ministry of Health’s ‘false claims’ on Weija Specialist Children’s hospital
1 minute -
Mamprugu Youth Association alleges Police extrajudicial killings in Zuarungu, demands independent inquiry
6 minutes -
Police arrest suspect linked to armed attack on VIP bus on Walewale–Nasia highway
13 minutes -
Reduce BECE subjects from 10 to 4 to ease stress, save time—Eduwatch’s Kofi Asare
20 minutes -
Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of breaching Victory Day ceasefire
32 minutes -
IGP special operations team arrest 50 suspects in anti-narcotics raid at Madina Market
33 minutes -
South Africa president faces call to resign after court ruling
37 minutes -
Ghana Publishing Company profit soars to GH¢16.959m in 2025 – Felix Kwakye Ofosu
41 minutes -
South Africa says it will cooperate with AU review of xenophobia claims after Ghana petition
46 minutes -
Government reaffirms commitment to TVET reform at launch of Ghana TVET report 2026
54 minutes -
Police warn content creators against criminal acts disguised as online content
1 hour -
Three more suspects arrested in murder of Indian national found dead in car boot — Police
1 hour -
The One Vecta AI Summit 2026 to convene Africa’s AI policymakers and industry leaders
1 hour -
U.S. Embassy and Ghana Armed Forces conclude medical readiness exercise
1 hour -
Dozens killed in Al-Qaeda-linked attacks on villages in central MaliÂ
1 hour