Gene therapy might someday help mend badly broken bones … – Health24

Posted: May 20, 2017 at 7:41 am

19 May 2017 Gene therapy might someday help mend badly broken bones This experimental method combines gene therapy, stem cells and ultrasound

Researchers have found that an experimental technique has healed large bone breaks in lab animals, researchers have found.

The technique is still far from becoming a reality, but, it repaired large bone gaps in the mini-pigs scientists studied. The hope, the researchers say, is to eventually help people with badly broken bones that won't heal.

The results of the study were published in Science Translational Medicine.

When a bone sustains a simple fracture, it is usually able to self-repair with time (and a cast). However, severe fractures can leave large gaps in the bone that the self-healing process cannot bridge.

The aim of gene therapy

Health24 previously reported that the basic function of genes is to regulate the production of proteins required for the healthy working of cells. Thus, genetic defects manifest in either too little or too much of a protein being produced.

The aim of gene therapy is to replace the defective gene with a healthy one. The correct amount of proteins will be produced, and the disease will then be cured.

Geneticists are literally snipping defective pieces out of a strand of DNA with molecular scissors called CRISPR.

Bone grafting

Right now, the "gold standard" treatment for those fractures is bone grafting, said Dan Gazit, one of the senior researchers on the new study.

There, surgeons take bone tissue from elsewhere in the body or from a donor and use it to repair the damaged bone.

When bone grafting is done with a patient's own tissue often taken from the pelvis that means additional surgery. And it can leave patients with prolonged pain and added risk of infection, Gazit said.

Newapproach

First, the researchers implanted a matrix of collagen a protein in bone into the gap between the two sides of a fractured bone.

That collagen then attracted the bone's resident stem cells, and gave them a structure to settle into. Stem cells are early cells that develop into mature tissue, including bone.

Once those cells have populated the gap in the bone, the next step involves gene therapy. The researchers injected a mixture of "microbubbles" and genetic material for a bone-promoting protein, called BMP, into the injury site.

That spurred the stem cells to form new bone tissue, according to the report.

In this study, the tactic healed bone breaks in all of the lab animals the researchers treated, Gazit said. In untreated pigs, the breaks did not heal, the findings showed.

A sophisticated approach needed

"But there are problems with BMP," said Dr Joseph Lane, an orthopaedic trauma surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City.

A central issue, he said, is that very high BMP doses may be needed, and side effects including infections and excess bone growth are common.

The new approach is "going in that direction", said Lane, who was not involved in the research. The "beauty" of it, he said, is that it harnesses the bone-promoting effects of BMP in a more natural way.

A number of questions should be answered before human trials are done, according to Lane. For example, he said, future animal research should look at more complicated fractures. The bone injuries used in this study are relatively easy to heal, versus severe fractures, Lane said.

Read more:

6 lifestyle triggers for broken bones

Menopause before 40 carries higher risk of broken bones

Patients in Mpumalanga are going home with broken bones

People with recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa aren't able to produce a protein that binds the upper and lower levels of skin together, and at the slightest friction, these layers slide and create blisters.

Tereza is the CEO of the National Osteoporosis Foundation and worked as a Nursing Sister in the field of Osteoporosis for 18 years prior to her appointment with the Foundation. She used to be the Educational Officer for the Foundation and co-wrote the patient brochure on Osteoporosis. Read more

The information provided does not constitute a diagnosis of your condition. You should consult a medical practitioner or other appropriate health care professional for a physical exmanication, diagnosis and formal advice. Health24 and the expert accept no responsibility or liability for any damage or personal harm you may suffer resulting from making use of this content.

Thanks! Check your inbox to complete your subscription

Quiz

Calcium calculator

Ask

Healthy Bones Expert

See the original post here:
Gene therapy might someday help mend badly broken bones ... - Health24

Related Posts

Comments are closed.

Archives