The Promise of Adult Stem Cells in
Disease Management, Anti-Aging, and Life Extension
Nov 17, 2013 By Dr. Mercola
Since time immemorial, man has
searched for the Fountain of Youth. Nothing has changed in that regard, but the
methods of inquiry and discovery have certainly progressed. Some of these ideas rival even the most
outlandish sci-fi scenarios imaginable, up to and including the transfer of
your consciousness into a bionic body.1 Personally, I don’t want to veer
too far from the natural order of things.
But the technology and science
enthusiast in me can’t help but be intrigued by the ideas and radical advances
in the field of extreme life extension. One of the most promising techniques in
this field, from my perspective, revolves around the use of adult stem cells. Adult stem cells are undifferentiated cells found throughout your body. They multiply and replace cells as needed, in order to regenerate damaged tissues. Their value, in terms of anti-aging and life extension, centers around their ability to self-renew indefinitely, and their ability to generate every type of cell needed for the organ from which it originates.
Dr. Bryant Villeponteau, author of Decoding
Longevity, is a leading researcher in novel anti-aging therapies involving
stem cells. He’s been a pioneer in this area for over three decades.
Personally, I believe that stem cell technology could have a dramatic influence
on our ability to live longer and replace some of our failing parts, which is
the inevitable result of the aging process. With an interest in aging and
longevity, Dr. Villeponteau started out by studying developmental biology.
“If we could understand development,
we could understand aging,”
he says. Later, his interest turned more toward the gene regulation aspects. While working as a professor at the University of Michigan at the Institute of Gerontology, he received, and accepted, a job offer from Geron Corporation—a Bay Area startup, in the early ‘90s.
“They were working on telomerase, which I was pretty excited about at the time. I joined them when they first started,” he says. “We had an all-out engagement there to clone human telomerase. It had been cloned in other animals but not in humans or mammals.”
What is Telomerase?
Your body is made up of 10 trillion cells, each of which contains a nucleus.
Inside the nucleus are the chromosomes that contain your genes. The chromosome
is made up of two “arms,” and each arm contains a single molecule DNA, which is
essentially a string of beads made up of units called bases.
A typical DNA molecule is about 100
million bases long. It’s curled up like slinky, extending from one end of the
chromosome to the other. At the very tip of each arm of the chromosome is
what’s called a telomere. If you were
to unravel the tip of the chromosome, a telomere is about 15,000 bases long at
the moment of conception in the womb. Immediately after conception your cells
begin to divide, and your telomeres begin to shorten each time the cell
divides. Once your telomeres have been reduced to about 5,000 bases, you
essentially die of old age.
Telomerase is an enzyme that is involved in
repairing the ends of the chromosomes, i.e. the telomere, thereby preventing it
from shortening.
“What you have to know about telomerase is that it’s only on in
embryonic cells. In adult cells, it’s totally, for the most part, turned off,
with the exception of adult stem cells,” Dr. Villeponteau
explains. “Adult stem cells have some telomerase – not full and not like the
embryonic stem cells, but they do have some telomerase activity.”
What’s so Great About
Stem Cells?
At Geron, Dr. Villeponteau worked on
a program to isolate human telomerase. They
were the first industrial lab to do so, and successfully at that. The founder
of Geron was Michael West—now known for his pioneering work with
embryonic stem cells. In ’94-‘95, West began searching for another product to
add to Geron’s arsenal besides telomerase. He honed in on stem cells,
recognizing their incredible potential for turning regeneration of body tissues
into a practical reality.
“He
identified several groups that were working on the isolation of human stem
cells,” Dr. Villeponteau says. “He put
together a collaborative agreement with these people and part-funding from
Geron. That bore fruit later in the ‘90s. That’s how Geron became both the
telomerase and the stem cell king – it was because of that early support of the
stem cell research. They had lines of stem cell, embryonic stem cells, before
anybody else did. I was involved in a
lot of that initial research. But what I came away with was that these
embryonic stem cells, as good as they were, had problems too. Because you had
to isolate them, you had to grow them, and then you had to put them into a
foreign body, if they were going to be useful. That means you have to worry
about immunity, because it’s a different type of somebody else’s cells. That
was a problem. The other problem was that it was not that
easy and straightforward to differentiate these embryonic stem cells the way
you want them. I started to be more interested at that point in adult stem
cells.”
Most of the research currently being
done, both in academia and industrial labs, revolves around either embryonic
stem cells, or a second type called induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS). Dr.
Villeponteau, on the other hand, believes adult stem cells are the easiest and
most efficient way to achieve results.
That said, adult stem cells do have
their drawbacks. While they’re your own cells, which eliminates the problem of
immune-related issues, there’s just not enough of them. Especially as you get
older, there’s fewer and fewer adult stem cells, and they tend to become
increasingly dysfunctional too. Yet another hurdle is that they don’t form the
tissues that they need to form...
To solve such issues, Dr.
Villeponteau has created a co. with the technology and expertise to amplify
your adult stem cells a million-fold or more, while still maintaining their
ability to differentiate all the different cell types, and without causing the
cells to age. Again, it is the adult
stem cell’s ability to potentially cure, or at least ameliorate, many of our
age-related diseases by regenerating tissue that makes this field so exciting.
The Case Against Telomerase for Life Extension
I was initially intrigued with the
principles of using telomerase to potentially extend human lifespan. But in
talking to a few other clinicians, I became aware that using a generic
process to influence the entire body raises potentially serious concerns. Dr. Villeponteau’s amplification
process of human adult stem cells, however, appears to bypass such concerns as
it’s targeted to one cell type. He explains:
“Here’s the issue: I think, with telomerase
activation systemically, it probably doesn’t do much good, because 99% of your
cells are not going to be affected, nor should they be. You don’t even want
them to be, because the somatic cells in the body, the cells that do all the
work – muscle, nerves, and all of that – have a natural lifespan. Maybe you can
do certain things to extend [their lifespan] a little bit. But you’re going to
do only a little on the margins. They’re going to be dying and they have to be
regenerated. There has to be a regeneration process. They used to think that
certain tissues like the brain and heart muscle didn’t have any stem cells;
didn’t have any new growth. That’s not true. Now we’ve found that they do have
them. In the case of neuro [brain cells], it is very important for memory that
you have this capability. I think where the telomerase activation really helps,
even taken systemically, is in the stem cell compartment because it would help
with your own stem cells. We have a product that we’ve been selling
commercially... to stimulate stem cell growth and maintenance of the stem
cells, and telomere function is part of it... [ Aging itself and stem cells are
multi-faceted and multi-pathway. You really have to attack it from different
pathways. There’s no magic bullet in its treatment. You have to get in multiple
ways, because aging is a process that [involves] multiple pathways.”
An Example of How Adult Stem Cells Work
Dr. Villeponteau uses skin as an
example to illustrate the potential benefits of adult stem cells, as your skin
can be used as a cosmetic “guidepost” for how old you are. As you get older, your skin starts to thin and loose its
elasticity. This is what causes your skin to wrinkle and sag. Now, your
skin is constantly renewing itself; shedding old cells as new cells are created
underneath. Adult stem cells are responsible for these new skin cells
being born.
As mentioned earlier, with age, your
adult stem cells are reduced in number. They also become increasingly
dysfunctional. As a result, the turnover in your skin slows down by about half.
If you were able to keep the regeneration of skin tissue at more youthful
levels by the addition of adult stem cells, you’d be able to maintain
youthful-looking skin longer.
While this may sound too good to be true, Dr. Villeponteau points to
experimental and practical evidence showing that body organs can be
repaired using this technology. As for stopping the clock on general aging,
however, the results are less clear.
“For
general aging, are we going to be able to replace your stem cells by, let’s
say, IV? We don’t know how much good we can do. But there has been one rat
experiment that’s been done. They were able to extend the lifespan by adding IV
stem cell population,” he says.
Three Different Types of Stem Cells
There
are three major types of stem cell populations, each with their own set of
pro’s and con’s:
1.
Embryonic stem
cells. As the name implies, embryonic stem
cells come from human embryos. Ethical issues have been raised with respects to
the use of embryonic stem cells, as you have to destroy the embryo in order to
collect the stem cells. While potent,
their immaturity also poses problems. It’s difficult to program them to develop
into later-stage tissues. It’s also difficult to find a way for them to form
the specific tissue types that you want, because they’re further removed from
those individual tissues – say, liver, brain, or muscle tissue. Embryonic stem
cells also have cancer potential because they form keratomas, although that’s
rare. And, since they are not your own cells, they may cause an immune
reaction.
2. Induced pluripotent stem cells
(iPS). These cells,
discovered in 2008, have caused great excitement among scientists. These cells
can take a fibroblast (a type of cell) from virtually any part of your body,
and transfect it with, or put in, four different genes that are known to be
important for stem cell function. This converts the original cell into what
amounts to an embryonic stem cell—your embryonic stem cell. However, this too has its problems. On the
upside, it eliminates the issue of an immune reaction, since it’s your own
cells. But it still has the potential to promote tumor growth. As explained by
Dr. Villeponteau, whenever you insert genes into a genome, you run the risk of
putting it near a cancer gene, thereby generating cancer. There are also
difficulties in being able to differentiate them into the various tissues you
might need. Still, it’s an exciting area where lots of research is being done.
“Very recently, there was one group that was able to take, I
think, seven chemical drugs and convert a small proportion of the fibroblast
into these iPS cells—doing it just chemically and not using any genes. Of
course, that’s much safer. But we don’t know the full impact of what that’s
going to mean yet,”
Dr. Villeponteau says.
3.
Adult
stem cells. On the upside, they don’t have the immunity
problem because it’s your own cells. This also eliminates any ethical problem.
So far, they do not appear to pose a cancer risk, which is another major
advantage. The disadvantage is that they’re difficult to grow and that
there aren’t enough of them to be effective. It would be a game changer if you
could amplify their numbers, and this is precisely this key component that Dr.
Villeponteau is working on. So far, they’ve developed the media, and a
procedure that looks promising, through which adult stem cells could be
multiplied. He believes it might be one to two years, however, before the
principle can be proven.
How Stem Cells are Currently Used
In
the US, it’s illegal to take out a cell, amplify it, and then put it back into
the human body. The FDA considers that as a drug. However, it is legal
to take bone marrow, for example, and isolate the stem cells. As long as you
don’t treat the cells with any kind of drug, or try to grow them, you can then
legally put them back in, in a purified, concentrated form. Such treatments
already exist, both in the US and abroad. One of the most common treatments
using isolated adult stem cells is for knee injuries. According to Dr. Villeponteau,
they’re achieving very good results doing that, and many are actually cured.
Adult stem cell therapy has also been successfully used in people with back
problems, and it appears particularly effective for joint problems and bone
growth. Dr. Villeponteau even used adult stem cells to treat bone loss around
one of his front teeth, with good results.
He also believes it could be successfully used in the treatment
of diabetes, and for recreating the human pancreas and perhaps even the heart.
Another area he believes will eventually benefit from adult stem cell
technology is in the general reconditioning of your circulatory system—your
arteries, veins and capillaries. Autoimmune diseases and multiple sclerosis
(MS) may also benefit. At present, there’s a doctor in Utah who claims to be
using adult stem cells on stroke patients; successfully regenerating brain
function. Stem cells have also been used in cancer patients for the past two
decades.
“Cancer patients, if they
get high levels of radiation to kill off the cancer, it also kills off
blood-forming stem cells. What they’ve been doing in some places, for 20 years
now, is to take a sample of your bone marrow and then replace it after the
chemotherapy or the radiation therapy to regrow your immune system quickly. They
can do that several times. That allows you to go to a much higher dosage of
radiation that you would otherwise not be able to survive.”
Another
novel technology that also makes use of stem cells is 3D-printing architecture,
where iPS cells or embryonic stem cells (not adult stem cells) are used to
recreate an organ using a 3D printer. This too is something straight out of a
science fiction movie, but it does
work, and it’s legal. They’ve
successfully replicated an esophagus for example, as well as human ears. It’s
really only a matter of time before they figure out how to replicate more
complex organs, such as kidneys, pancreas’, livers and hearts using this
technology.
More Information
When
I think about aggressive future efforts to reverse the aging process, nanotech
comes to mind. In talking to Dr. Villeponteau, I believe the technology he’s
working on is akin to biological nanotech. Rather than creating
synthetic nanobots to repair tissues, it would seem far wiser to focus on the
already intrinsic intelligence of the human body, which already knows how to
use adult stem cells to perform such tasks.
There’s no telling how long it will
take for this kind of technology to be perfected, but research is certainly
moving ahead at near-breakneck speed. Dr. Villeponteau believes adult stem
cells is the fastest way to make some real headway in the areas of cellular
regeneration and life extension.
Until then, you can certainly add
many years, likely decades, to your life simply by eating right, exercising (which promotes the production of muscle stem cells, by the
way) and living an otherwise clean and healthy lifestyle. Extreme life
extension, on the other hand, is a different matter.
“I think you can add 20 years to
your life now if you eat right, take the right supplements, and exercise. You’d
delay diseases, but that’s all you’re going to get. You’re not going to get
extreme changes. To do that, you need real science,” he says.
Dr. Villeponteau’s book, Decoding Longevity,
covers preventive strategies to prolong your life, mainly diet, exercise, and
supplements—although he admittedly also includes some drugs. A portion of the
book also covers future developments in the area of more radical life
extension, such as stem cell technology. To keep abreast of advancements in
this area, you can check out his company website at www.centagen.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment