Leaving injury behind
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Deirdre Newman
The spinal cord is the body’s version of Grand Central Station, a hub
of constantly percolating activity, sending impulses to the brain and
receiving impulses from it to direct to other parts of the body.
A spinal cord injury can bring this hub to a grinding halt,
rendering victims paralyzed throughout their bodies, depending on
where the injury occurs.
As treatment for such injuries evolves, minor breakthroughs are
leading the charge toward major advancements. At the forefront of the
most cutting-edge advanced work is UC Irvine, where one center has
positioned itself as a catalyst of research for treating injury and
disease of the spinal cord -- conducting a slew of projects in-house
while collaborating with leading researchers in the field, scientists
outside of the field and spinal cord injury victims.
The goal of the Reeve-Irvine Research Center is to engage this
diverse group of researchers in solving one of the trickiest
challenges of modern science.
“Spinal cord injuries are immensely complex,” said Maura
Hofstadter, director of education for the center. “It’s like a puzzle
and everyone is working on their own little piece. What we’re trying
to be here is a hub and help bring the puzzle pieces together.”
The center evolved out of admiration for Christopher Reeve by Joan
Irvine Smith. Smith, an heir to the Irvine development and a
horsewoman who owns two ranches, was impressed that Reeve never
blamed his horse after being thrown from it during a competition in
1995 that left him paralyzed. Smith offered a matching grant of $1
million to start the center.
“I was very, very grateful, not only for her generosity, but for
the reasoning behind it,” Reeve said.
In 1999, Oswald Steward was recruited to head the center. Steward,
who has a doctorate in psychobiology from UC Irvine, made the
cross-country trek from the University of Virginia, where he was
chairman of its Department of Neuroscience.
Steward is also the chairman of the Scientific Advisory Committee
for the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation, which Reeve and wife,
Dana, established.
Reeve said he is impressed with Steward’s expeditious approach to
research.
“Scientists like Oz Steward believe that the mission is to solve a
particular problem as quickly as possible and then move on to
something else and as a patient advocate, I of course, appreciate
scientists like Ozzie Steward and his team at UCI that share that
philosophy that research is not an end in itself,” Reeve said. “It is
a tool to produce results and the result that we want is to relieve
the suffering of people who are paralyzed.”
Research on
the cutting edge
The 6,000-square-foot center is housed in the Gillespie
Neuroscience Research Center at the College of Medicine and employs
about 50 people.
The center encourages collaboration, cooperation and communication
and the layout is a testament to that philosophy, Hofstadter said. It
is an open space that promotes a free-flowing exchange of ideas, in
contrast to most labs that feature long quiet halls and locked doors.
Researchers use mice and rats to study nerve regeneration since
they breed rapidly and their genetics are well understood, Hofstadter
said. The tiny brains and delicate, thread-like spinal cords of these
animals are suspended in solutions in a freezer.
There are three primary researchers -- Steward, Aileen Anderson
and Hans Keirstead -- as well as graduate students, post-doctoral
students, visiting faculty and undergrads.
“We want to bring students in to pique their interest so they will
pursue spinal-cord injury [research],” Hofstadter said.
In addition to working with rats and mice, the center works with
human embryonic stem cells.
Keirstead, 35, an assistant professor of anatomy and neurobiology,
has access to five of the 63 human embryonic stem cells approved for
use in the country.
“What we have done for the first time in the world is to
differentiate the human embryonic stem cells into a specialized
sub-brain cell type thought to be necessary for repair,” Hofstadter
said.
After they are differentiated, they are transferred into animals
with spinal cord injuries.
The results have been extraordinary, Keirstead said.
Keirstead has already given two Senate pitches for funding of this
type of research. He stressed the importance of federal legislators
hearing about successful outcomes during their terms of office on
research some have supported.
The center is also one of the few labs in the world that has
obtained pure lines of human olfactory ensheathing neuroglia --
obtained from the nose -- that have shown potential for cell repair
as well, Keirstead said. Neuroglial tissue comprises the bulk of
cells in the central nervous system and provide support for the nerve
cells.
Preliminary studies have shown that paralyzed animals can walk
again after receiving these cells, Keirstead said.
Reaching out for help
In addition to the three main researchers, the center now has 14
faculty members as associates. Because UCI boasts a committed group
of neuroscience researchers, Steward wanted to pick their brains on
the topic of spinal cord injury.
One of the associates is Sue Bryant, who studies salamander limb
regeneration. Another one is Anne Calof, who works with the
development of the nervous system in humans.
“If we can figure out how we did it the first time, maybe we can
trick the body into doing it again,” Hofstadter said.
Aerospace engineer David Reinkensmeyer will soon have a space in
nearby Hewitt Hall to work on creating robots to help spinal cord
injury victims relearn how to walk. The robots will replace physical
therapists for hip and ankle support.
“When we do clinical trials with any of these treatments,
rehabilitation will be part of it,” Hofstadter said. “We’re very
excited about it.”
Steward also took the initiative to invite the California Spinal
Cord Injury Neural Regeneration Consortium, a group of about 100
scientists, to work on solving the puzzle. California has the dubious
distinction of producing the highest rate of spinal cord injuries in
the country, mostly from car accidents and surfing.
The center makes it a priority to invite feedback from the
community it was established to help. It conducts surveys asking
spinal cord injury victims what they would like to see the center
focus on. Based on the outreach, researchers found that most of what
they were emphasizing -- helping patients walk again -- is not the
foremost desire. Bladder control is, they found, and added that to
their research, Hofstadter said.
It also hosts a meet and greet with the scientists, where spinal
cord injury victims, their families and their caregivers can talk to
researchers from around the state.
And it has one other source with intimate knowledge of life after
an injury. One of the center’s own researchers, Kim Anderson, 31, was
injured in a car accident in Texas when she was 17 that rendered her
a quadriplegic. Her post-doctoral work at the center focuses on how
molecules are affected after a cervical spinal cord injury.
“I’m very driven to find treatments of any type to help people
with spinal cord injuries, especially quadriplegics, which I am,
because we have the biggest burden physically, financially and
emotionally,” Anderson said. “And I think that people with spinal
cord injuries have a great amount of information that they can give
researchers about what humans are really going through and can really
help the development of looking at outcomes when they’re looking at
clinical trials.”
Backing risky research
In 2000, the president of the University of California asked the
center to administer the California Spinal Cord Injury Research Fund
(previously the Roman Reed Bill). The Reed bill, named for Roman
Reed, a Bay Area man who suffered an paralyzing accident while
playing college football, is state-funded program that provides $1
million a year for spinal cord injury research. The center was
entrusted with developing a research program for faculty from the UC
system and the rest of California.
In line with its philosophy of attacking the puzzle from all
angles, the center disburses seed money for projects that might be
considered too uncertain by others, Hofstadter said.
“It’s a little risky, but we’ll get good information, even if [the
project] fails,” Hofstadter said.
The center gives a smaller amount of funds to the Roman Reed Core
Laboratory, which is part of the center. The goal of the lab is to
expand the number of people participating in spinal cord injury
research. To that end, it invites researchers with an interest in
spinal cord injury but who are not working in the field.
“Like a chemist who doesn’t know a rat from a dog and doesn’t know
where the spinal cord is, but wants to explore,” Hofstadter said. “We
tell them to write up a proposal, then come play with us. So a
project that would likely never happen or take years [can happen] in
three months. We’re fast-tracking ideas.”
The center is currently in a campaign to raise $2 million for
developing human spinal cord injury studies and treatments and is
about three-quarters of the way there, Steward said.
“We’re just really excited about what’s going on,” Steward said.
“It’s still a unique resource in the world.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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