What are the potential uses of human stem cells and the obstacles
that must be overcome before these potential uses will be realized?
There are many ways in which human stem cells can be used in research and the clinic. Studies of human embryonic stem cells
will yield information about the complex events that occur during human
development. A primary goal of this work is to identify how undifferentiated stem cells become the differentiated cells that form the tissues and organs. Scientists know that turning genes on and off is central to this process. Some of the most serious medical
conditions, such as cancer and birth defects, are due to abnormal cell division and differentiation.
A more complete understanding of the genetic and molecular controls of
these processes may yield information about how such diseases arise and
suggest new strategies for therapy. Predictably controlling cell
proliferation and differentiation requires additional basic research on
the molecular and genetic signals that regulate cell division and
specialization. While recent developments with iPS cells suggest some
of the specific factors that may be involved, techniques must be
devised to introduce these factors safely into the cells and control
the processes that are induced by these factors.
Human stem cells could also be used to test new drugs. For example,
new medications could be tested for safety on differentiated cells
generated from human pluripotent
cell lines. Other kinds of cell lines are already used in this way.
Cancer cell lines, for example, are used to screen potential anti-tumor
drugs. The availability of pluripotent stem cells would allow drug
testing in a wider range of cell types. However, to screen drugs
effectively, the conditions must be identical when comparing different
drugs. Therefore, scientists will have to be able to precisely control
the differentiation of stem cells into the specific cell type on which
drugs will be tested. Current knowledge of the signals controlling
differentiation falls short of being able to mimic these conditions
precisely to generate pure populations of differentiated cells for each
drug being tested.
Perhaps the most important potential application of human stem cells
is the generation of cells and tissues that could be used for cell based therapies.
Today, donated organs and tissues are often used to replace ailing or
destroyed tissue, but the need for transplantable tissues and organs
far outweighs the available supply. Stem cells, directed to
differentiate into specific cell types, offer the possibility of a
renewable source of replacement cells and tissues to treat diseases
including Alzheimer's diseases, spinal cord injury, stroke, burns,
heart disease, diabetes, osteoarthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis.
For example, it may become possible to generate healthy heart muscle
cells in the laboratory and then transplant those cells into patients
with chronic heart disease. Preliminary research in mice and other
animals indicates that bone marrow stromal cells, transplanted into a
damaged heart, can have beneficial effects. Whether these cells can
generate heart muscle cells or stimulate the growth of new blood
vessels that repopulate the heart tissue, or help via some other
mechanism is actively under investigation. For example, injected cells
may accomplish repair by secreting growth factors, rather than actually
incorporating into the heart. Promising results from animal studies
have served as the basis for a small number of exploratory studies in
humans (for discussion, see call-out box, "Can Stem Cells Mend a Broken
Heart?"). Other recent studies in cell culture systems indicate that it may be possible to direct the differentation of embryonic stem cells or adult bone marrow cells into heart muscle cells.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD), which includes hypertension, coronary
heart disease, stroke, and congestive heart failure, has ranked as the
number one cause of death in the United States every year since 1900
except 1918, when the nation struggled with an influenza epidemic.
Nearly 2600 Americans die of CVD each day, roughly one person every 34
seconds. Given the aging of the population and the relatively dramatic
recent increases in the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors such
as obesity and type 2 diabetes, CVD will be a significant health
concern well into the 21st century.
Cardiovascular disease can deprive heart tissue of oxygen, thereby
killing cardiac muscle cells (cardiomyocytes). This loss triggers a
cascade of detrimental events, including formation of scar tissue, an
overload of blood flow and pressure capacity, the overstretching of
viable cardiac cells attempting to sustain cardiac output, leading to
heart failure, and eventual death. Restoring damaged heart muscle
tissue, through repair or regeneration, is therefore a potentially new
strategy to treat heart failure.
The use of embryonic and adult-derived stem cells for cardiac repair
is an active area of research. A number of stem cell types, including
embryonic stem (ES) cells, cardiac stem cells that naturally reside
within the heart, myoblasts (muscle stem cells), adult bone
marrow-derived cells including mesenchymal cells (bone marrow-derived
cells that give rise to tissues such as muscle, bone, tendons,
ligaments, and adipose tissue), endothelial progenitor cells (cells
that give rise to the endothelium, the interior lining of blood
vessels), and umbilical cord blood cells, have been investigated as
possible sources for regenerating damaged heart tissue. All have been
explored in mouse or rat models, and some have been tested in larger
animal models, such as pigs.
A few small studies have also been carried out in humans, usually in
patients who are undergoing open-heart surgery. Several of these have
demonstrated that stem cells that are injected into the circulation or
directly into the injured heart tissue appear to improve cardiac
function and/or induce the formation of new capillaries. The mechanism
for this repair remains controversial, and the stem cells likely
regenerate heart tissue through several pathways. However, the stem
cell populations that have been tested in these experiments vary
widely, as do the conditions of their purification and application.
Although much more research is needed to assess the safety and improve
the efficacy of this approach, these preliminary clinical experiments
show how stem cells may one day be used to repair damaged heart tissue,
thereby reducing the burden of cardiovascular disease.
In people who suffer from type 1 diabetes, the cells of the pancreas
that normally produce insulin are destroyed by the patient's own immune
system. New studies indicate that it may be possible to direct the
differentiation of human embryonic stem cells in cell culture to form
insulin-producing cells that eventually could be used in
transplantation therapy for persons with diabetes.
To realize the promise of novel cell-based therapies for such pervasive
and debilitating diseases, scientists must be able to manipulate stem
cells so that they possess the necessary characteristics for successful
differentiation, transplantation, and engraftment. The following is a
list of steps in successful cell-based treatments that scientists will
have to learn to control to bring such treatments to the clinic. To be
useful for transplant purposes, stem cells must be reproducibly made to:
Proliferate extensively and generate sufficient quantities of tissue.
Differentiate into the desired cell type(s).
Survive in the recipient after transplant.
Integrate into the surrounding tissue after transplant.
Function appropriately for the duration of the recipient's life.
Avoid harming the recipient in any way.
Also, to avoid the problem of immune rejection, scientists are
experimenting with different research strategies to generate tissues
that will not be rejected.
To summarize, stem cells offer exciting promise for future
therapies, but significant technical hurdles remain that will only be
overcome through years of intensive research.