Bone Marrow Cells Help Repair Damaged Lung
ScienceDaily (Jan. 27, 2009)
— Thomas Waddell and colleagues, at Toronto General Research Institute,
Toronto, have identified a population of mouse bone marrow cells that
can contribute to repair of the injured lung. As cells expressing
similar markers were identified in human bone marrow, the authors
suggest that this cell population might be used therapeutically to treat
individuals with diseases characterized by damage to the lining of the
lungs.
In the study, a population of cells expressing the protein CCSP was
identified in the bone marrow of both humans and mice. When cultured ex
vivo these cells expressed markers of lung epithelial cells, the cells
that line the lungs, and when the mouse cells were injected into mice
they migrated to damaged lung tissue.
Further analysis showed that if mice lacking CCSP were transplanted
with CCSP-sufficient bone marrow, cells derived from the CCSP-expressing
bone marrow could be found in the lining of the lungs after they had
been damaged.
The authors therefore suggest that by determining that
CSSP-expressing bone marrow cells can contribute to reconstitution of
the lining of the lung after damage, they have reconciled previous
controversies regarding the ability of bone marrow cells to be a factor
in lung regeneration.
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