The Asian Age

Zebrafish can help in healing spinal injuries

- PTI

Washington: Scientists have pinpointed key molecules that prompt damaged nerve fibres in zebrafish to regenerate themselves, an advance that could hold clues to new therapies for people with spinal cord injuries. For people and other mammals, damage to the spinal cord is permanent and results in irreversib­le paralysis. Zebrafish have the remarkable ability to regain full movement within four weeks of injury to their spinal cord. Studies have shown that they are able to restore damaged connection­s and nerve cells in the spinal cord. Scientists at the University of Edinburgh in the UK found that after injury, wound-healing cells called fibroblast­s move into the site of damage. These fibroblast­s produce a molecule called collagen 12, which changes the structure of the support matrix that surrounds nerve fibres. This enables the damaged fibres to grow back across the wound site and restore the lost connection­s. The team found that fibroblast­s are instructed to make collagen 12 by a chemical signal called wnt. Understand­ing these signals could hold clues for therapies to help heal the spinal cord after injury, the researcher­s said. “In people and other mammals, the matrix in the injury site blocks nerves from growing back after an injury,” said Thomas Becker, of Edinburgh’s Centre for Neuroregen­eration. “We have now pinpointed the signals that remove this roadblock in zebrafish, so that nerve cells can repair connection­s that are lost after damage to the spinal cord,” said Becker. “We next plan to check whether triggering these signals in other animals can help them to repair nerve connection­s damaged by spinal cord injuries,” he said. The study was published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions. —

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