| 16 Novembre 2013
The research, published in the latest issue of STEM CELLS Translational Medicine,  has determined that a single injection of adipose-derived stem cells  (ASCs) reduced the retinal damage induced by light exposure in mice.  Also, the study found that adipose-derived stem cells in conditioned  medium inhibited the retinal damage by hydrogen peroxide and visible  light both in the medium and in live mice. Moreover the research revealed that a type of protein called  progranulin found in the ASCs might be what plays the pivotal role in  protecting against light-induced eye damage. Excessive light exposure leads to photoreceptor degeneration and  several studies have suggested that a long-term history of exposure to  light may have some impact on the incidence of age-related macular  degeneration. Photoreceptor loss is the primary cause of blindness in  degenerative diseases such as age-related macular degeneration and  retinitis pigmentosa. “However, there are few effective therapeutic strategies for these  diseases,” said the study’s authors, Hideaki Hara, Ph.D., R.Ph., and  Kazuhiro Tsuruma, Ph.D., R.Ph. “Recent studies have demonstrated that bone marrow-derived stem cells  protect against central nervous system degeneration with limited  results. Just like the bone marrow stem cells, ASCs also self-renew and  have the ability to change, or differentiate, as they grow. But since  they come from fat, they can be obtained more easily under local  anesthesia and in large quantities.” The fat tissue used in the study was taken from a mouse, altered in the  lab and then tested in retinal cells (from mice) in vitro, where it  proved to have a protective effect. These results led the team to then  test their theory on a live group of mice that had retinal damage after  exposure to high levels of light. Five days after receiving injections of the ASCs, the animals were  tested for photoreceptor degeneration and retinal dysfunction. The  results showed the degeneration had been significantly inhibited. “Progranulin was identified as a major secreted protein of ASCs, which  showed protective effects against retinal damage in culture and in  animal tests using mice,” Drs. Hara and Tsuruma said. “As such, it may  be a potential target for the treatment of degenerative diseases of the  retina such as age-related macular degeneration and retinitis  pigmentosa. The ASCs reduced photoreceptor degeneration without  engraftment, which is concordant with the results of previous studies  using bone marrow stem cells.” “This study, suggesting that the protein progranulin may play a pivotal  role in protecting against retinal light-induced damage, points to the  potential for new therapeutic approaches to degenerative diseases of the  retina,” said, Anthony Atala, MD, editor of STEM CELLS Translational  Medicine and director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative  Medicine.
Durham, NC – A team of researchers from Gifu  Pharmaceutical University and Gifu University in Japan has published  results demonstrating that a type of protein found in stem cells taken  from adipose (fat) tissue can reverse and prevent age-related,  light-induced retinal damage in a mouse model, offering hope for those  faced with permanent vision loss.









