101. Developing stem cell therapies for juvenile and adult-onset Huntington's disease
- Author
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Heather Stewart, Vicki L. Wheelock, Jan A. Nolta, Kyle D. Fink, Geralyn Annett, William Gruenloh, Audrey Torrest, Kari Pollock, Teresa Tempkin, and Peter Deng
- Subjects
Central Nervous System ,Embryology ,Cell Transplantation ,Cellular differentiation ,Medical Biotechnology ,Neurodegenerative ,Bioinformatics ,Regenerative medicine ,Animals, Genetically Modified ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Neurotrophic factors ,Child ,Neurons ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Mesenchymal Stromal Cells ,Huntington's disease ,Cell Differentiation ,Neuroprotection ,Huntington Disease ,Neurological ,Disease Progression ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Stem cell ,Huntington’s disease ,Adult ,Biomedical Engineering ,regenerative medicine ,Genetically Modified ,Biology ,Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation ,Article ,Rare Diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Nerve Growth Factors ,Embryonic Stem Cells ,5.2 Cellular and gene therapies ,Mesenchymal stem cell ,Neurosciences ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Stem Cell Research ,medicine.disease ,Embryonic stem cell ,Brain Disorders ,Transplantation ,stem cell ,Immune System ,Immunology ,transplantation ,Stem Cell Transplantation ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
© 2015 Future Medicine Ltd. Stem cell therapies have been explored as a new avenue for the treatment of neurologic disease and damage within the CNS in part due to their native ability to mimic repair mechanisms in the brain. Mesenchymal stem cells have been of particular clinical interest due to their ability to release beneficial neurotrophic factors and their ability to foster a neuroprotective microenviroment. While early stem cell transplantation therapies have been fraught with technical and political concerns as well as limited clinical benefits, mesenchymal stem cell therapies have been shown to be clinically beneficial and derivable from nonembryonic, adult sources. The focus of this review will be on emerging and extant stem cell therapies for juvenile and adult-onset Huntington's disease.
- Published
- 2015
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