Use of Stem Cells in Personalized Medicine
2012-11-28 09:16:33
Johns Hopkins researchers report concrete steps in the use of human stem cells to test how diseased cells respond to drugs. Their success highlights a pathway toward faster, cheaper drug development for some genetic illnesses, as well as the ability to pre-test a therapy's safety and effectiveness on cultured clones of a patient's own cells.
The project, described in an article published November 25 on the website of
the journal Nature Biotechnology, began several years ago, when Gabsang Lee,
D.V.M., Ph.D., an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine's Institute for Cell Engineering, was a postdoctoral fellow at
Sloan-Kettering Institute in New York. To see if induced pluripotent stem cells
(iPSCs) could be used to make specialized disease cells for quick and easy drug
testing, Lee and his colleagues extracted cells from the skin of a person with a
rare genetic disease called Riley-Day syndrome, chosen because it affects only
one type of nerve cell that is difficult if not impossible to extract directly
from a traditional biopsy. These traits made Riley-Day an ideal candidate for
alternative ways of generating cells for study.
In a so-called "proof of concept" experiment, the researchers biochemically
reprogrammed the skin cells from the patient to form iPSCs, which can grow into
any cell type in the body. The team then induced the iPSCs to grow into nerve
cells. "Because we could study the nerve cells directly, we could for the first
time see exactly what was going wrong in this disease," says Lee. Some symptoms
of Riley-Day syndrome are insensitivity to pain, episodes of vomiting, poor
coordination and seizures; only about half of affected patients reach age 30.
In the recent research at Johns Hopkins and Memorial Sloan-Kettering, Lee and
his co-workers used these same lab-grown Riley-Day nerve cells to screen about
7,000 drugs for their effects on the diseased cells. With the aid of a robot
programmed to analyze the effects, the researchers quickly identified eight
compounds for further testing, of which one -- SKF-86466 -- ultimately showed
promise for stopping or reversing the disease process at the cellular level.
Lee says a clinical trial with SKF-86466 might not be feasible because of the
small number of Riley-Day patients worldwide, but suggests that a closely
related version of the compound, one that has already been approved by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration for another use, could be employed for the patients
after a few tests.
The implications of the experiment reach beyond Riley-Day syndrome, however.
"There are many rare, 'orphan' genetic diseases that will never be addressed
through the costly current model of drug development," Lee explains. "We've
shown that there may be another way forward to treat these illnesses."
Another application of the new stem cell process could be treatments tailored
not only to an illness, but also to an individual patient, Lee says. That is,
iPSCs could be made for a patient, then used to create a laboratory culture of,
for example, pancreatic cells, in the case of a patient with type 1 diabetes.
The efficacy and safety of various drugs could then be tested on the cultured
cells, and doctors could use the results to help determine the best treatment.
"This approach could move much of the trial-and-error process of beginning a new
treatment from the patient to the petri dish, and help people to get better
faster," says Lee.
Other authors of the paper are Christina N. Ramirez, Ph.D., Nadja Zeltner,
Ph.D., Becky Liu, Constantin Radu, M.S., Bhavneet Bhinder, Hakim Djaballah,
Ph.D., and Lorenz Studer, Ph.D., of the Sloan-Kettering Institute; and Hyesoo
Kim, Ph.D., Young Jun Kim, M.D., Ph.D., InYoung Choi, Ph.D., and Bipasha
Mukherjee-Clavin of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
The work was supported by funds from New York State Stem Cell Science (NYSTEM),
the New York Stem Cell Foundation (NYSCF), the state of Maryland (TEDCO, MSCRF),
the Commonwealth Foundation for Cancer Research, the Experimental Therapeutics
Center at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, the William Randolph Hearst
Fund in Experimental Therapeutics, the L.S. Wells Foundation, and the National
Cancer Institute (grant number 5 P30 CA008748-44).
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