Master regulator found for regenerating nerve fibres in live animals
Monday, October 26, 2009 - 04:28
in Health & Medicine
Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston report that an enzyme known as Mst3b, previously identified in their lab, is essential for regenerating damaged axons (nerve fibres) in a live animal model, in both the peripheral and central nervous systems. Their findings, published online by Nature Neuroscience on 25 October, suggest Mst3b - or agents that stimulate it - as a possible means of treating stroke, spinal cord damage and traumatic brain injury. Normally, neurones in the central nervous system (the brain and spinal cord) cannot regenerate injured nerve fibers, limiting people's ability to recover from brain or spinal cord injuries...