It is possible to convert one type of brain cell into another, which could pave way for improved therapies for Alzheimer’s, Harvard scientists have discovered.
The discovery “tells you that maybe the brain is not as immutable as we always thought, because at least during an early window of time one can re-programme the identity of one neuronal class into another,” said Paola Arlotta, from Harvard’s Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology.
Arlotta and Caroline Rouaux have proven that neurons too can change their mind, journal Nature Cell Biology reported.
Arlotta targeted callosal projection neurons, which connect the two hemispheres of the brain, and turned them into neurons similar to corticospinal motor neurons, one of two populations of neurons destroyed in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.
To achieve such reprogramming of neuronal identity, the researchers used a transcription factor called Fezf2, which long as been known for playing a central role in the development of corticospinal neurons in the embryo.
What makes the finding even more significant is that the work was done in the brains of living mice, rather than in collections of cells in laboratory dishes.
The mice were young, so researchers still do not know if neuronal reprogramming will be possible in older laboratory animals — and humans.
If it is possible, this has enormous implications for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.
“Neurodegenerative diseases typically effect a specific population of neurons, leaving many others untouched. For example, in ALS it is corticospinal motor neurons in the brain and motor neurons in the spinal cord, among the many neurons of the nervous system, that selectively die,” Arlotta said.
“What if one could take neurons that are spared in a given disease and turn them directly into the neurons that die off? In ALS, if you could generate even a small percentage of corticospinal motor neurons, it would likely be sufficient to recover basic functioning,” she said in a statement.