• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Scientists regenerate vital immune system organ in mice

Status
Not open for further replies.

GK86

Homeland Security Fail
http://mobile.theverge.com/2014/4/1...regenerate-immune-system-organ-thymus-in-mice

The aging process can be slowed, but it's an inexorable deterioration, as our bodies stop repairing the organs we need to survive. But researchers at the University of Edinburgh have managed to regenerate at least one organ in mice by tweaking a single gene. The team targeted the thymus, an organ responsible for incubating the white blood cells — called T cells — that attack infections. The thymus is crucial in immune system development, but it's also one of the first organs to atrophy in otherwise healthy humans. As a person (or mouse) ages normally, they'll become more and more vulnerable to disease, making something like the flu potentially deadly.

The aging mice in this study, however, saw their atrophied thymuses regenerate, more than doubling in size and increasing production of T cells. Researchers had increased the levels of a protein called FOXN1, which has previously been linked to thymic degeneration, and successfully stimulated cells that helped rebuild the organ. Scientists have previously increased thymus size by castrating animals, but the structure remains "old." By contrast, these mice, they concluded, had thymuses that closely resembled ones that had not yet started to deteriorate. "The exciting thing really is the manner in which it is done," co-author Nick Bredenkamp tells the BBC. "We've targeted a single gene and we've been able to regenerate an entire organ."

The University of Edinburgh news service says it's not yet clear whether the mice saw a concrete improvement in their immune systems, although logically it should be likely. It's also plausible that similar treatments could be applied to humans, partially reversing the aging process or helping people with otherwise suppressed immune systems become less vulnerable to illness. But co-author Clare Blackburn says that more work would need to be carried out, including a search for adverse effects, before the process could be tested on humans. Beyond the potential direct benefits, this breakthrough could also teach us more about how the aging process works in other organs. The study "suggests that organ regeneration in a mammal can be directed by manipulation of a single protein, which is likely to have broad implications for other areas of regenerative biology," says Dr. Rob Buckle, head of regenerative medicine at the University of Edinburgh's Medical Research Council.

The study's results have been published in the journal Development.
 

Phobophile

A scientist and gentleman in the manner of Batman.
Hopefully this could lead to future AIDS treatments. The possibilities seem innumerable but sounds like the research is far from complete.
 

GK86

Homeland Security Fail
Do you want super mice? Because this is how you get super mice.

You need super mice before you can create super humans.


Hopefully this could lead to future AIDS treatments. The possibilities seem innumerable but sounds like the research is far from complete.

That was my first thought too. Hopefully they are we to do this with humans.
 
Over the years mice have been cured of cancer, aids, blindness, herpysimplex 10 and have regrown body parts. Humanity seems to care more for mice than they care for themselves because I have't seen any of that come out way yet. Mice don't even pay taxes.
 

Raist

Banned
Yeah that's very cool, but it's very hard to see any feasible application for humans, even ingoring potential unforeseen side effects.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom