Cotsarelis research

Read about and discuss general hair loss topics.

Moderator: moderators



Post Reply
User avatar
Tricia
Prolific Poster
Posts: 325
Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2004 5:19 am
Hair Loss Type: Don't Know
Have you had a hair transplant?: No

Cotsarelis research

Post by Tricia » Wed May 16, 2007 7:04 am

This is just a little blurb I found in an Australian newspaper. I'm sure there is a better article out there on the research.
May 17, 2007

IN A discovery that could lead to a baldness cure, it has been shown for the first time that hair can be regrown. The research overturns a long-standing belief that loss of hair follicles in adulthood is permanent.

An American team of scientists found that, under the right conditions, skin has the ability to revert to a more primitive state and regenerate normally, producing new hair. The research was carried out in mice and involved researchers cutting away pieces of skin tissue.

"We've found that we can influence the skin to heal in a way that includes all the normal structures of the skin, such as hair follicles and oil glands," said team leader, University of Pennsylvania dermatologist, George Cotsarelis. He said the findings could have applications for a range of hair-loss conditions such as alopecia, not just male baldness.

Cheng-Ming Chuong, of the University of California pathology department, said the study could have even wider implications for medicine. "(It is) an unexpected finding that could could change our current understanding of repair and regeneration in adult mammals," he said.
5% minoxidil
Multivitamin with iron

User avatar
Tricia
Prolific Poster
Posts: 325
Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2004 5:19 am
Hair Loss Type: Don't Know
Have you had a hair transplant?: No

Post by Tricia » Thu May 17, 2007 6:41 am

This is all over the news today. Here's a better article on the research...
Wounded mice offer hair loss hope
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Mice with deep skin wounds can grow new hair, scientists said on Wednesday in a finding that offers hope for a baldness remedy for humans.

The mice regenerated hair at the site of the wound via molecular processes similar to those used in embryonic development, according to the research, published in the journal Nature.

The findings show mammals possess greater regenerative abilities than commonly believed. While some amphibians can regenerate limbs and some reptiles can regenerate tails, regeneration in mammals is far more limited.

Dr. George Cotsarelis, a dermatology professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia who led the study, said the findings dispel the dogma that hair loss is permanent in people and other mammals, and that once they are lost new hair follicles cannot grow.

Cotsarelis said the findings could pave the way for remedies for male-pattern baldness and other types of hair-loss. He said the idea would be to apply compounds to get epidermal cells to turn into hair follicles.

The regenerated follicles functioned normally, cycling through the various stages of hair growth, and the hair was indistinguishable from neighboring hair with a key exception -- it lacked pigmentation and was white.

The otherwise brown-haired mice had patches of white hair marking the site of the wound.

Cotsarelis said the white-hair issue may not materialize in any baldness remedy in people because the human pigmentation system differs from that in mice.

The researchers made relatively large wounds on the backs of adult mice, and found that if a wound reached a certain size new hairs formed at its center, with the skin undergoing changes mimicking stages of embryonic hair-follicle development.

Dormant embryonic molecular pathways were activated, sending stem cells -- master cells able to transform into other cell types -- to the damaged skin.

The stem cells that gave rise to the regenerated follicles were not stem cells usually associated with hair-follicle development.

"They're actually coming from epidermal cells that don't normally make hair follicles. So they're somehow reprogrammed and told to make a follicle," Cotsarelis said.

The researchers also found a way to amplify the natural regeneration process, causing mice to grow twice as many new hairs by giving the skin a specific molecular signal.

Cotsarelis is involved with Follica Inc., a privately held start-up company that has licensed the patent on the process from the University of Pennsylvania. He said it probably would be more than five years before a treatment was possible.

Cotsarelis also envisioned treating wounds in a way that would leave skin with hair follicles, sweat glands and other normal attributes that would be functionally and cosmetically much better than a scar.

Dr. Cheng-Ming Chuong, a professor of pathology at the University of Southern California who was not involved in the study, said it proved the principle that hair can regenerate from adult skin, but cautioned that human skin differs from mouse skin.

"Repair and regeneration appear to be in competition," Chuong said by e-mail.

"Since fast-closing wounds help the survival of wild animals, repair often dominates regeneration. In the practice of medicine, physicians are trained to close wounds as soon as possible, thus leaving not enough time for regeneration to occur."

Copyright 2007 Reuters. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/05 ... index.html
5% minoxidil
Multivitamin with iron

User avatar
HairLossFight.com
Site Admin
Posts: 1218
Joined: Sun Aug 24, 2003 3:24 am
Hair Loss Type: Androgenetic Alopecia (Male Pattern Baldness)
Norwood Level: Norwood III Vertex
Have you had a hair transplant?: Yes

Re: Cotsarelis research

Post by HairLossFight.com » Mon Jul 23, 2007 9:30 pm

I saw this when it was all over the news a few weeks ago. I think this is a fantastic discovery and most likely will have applicability to the hair cloning and hair multiplication modalities that are being developed. It seems slowly but surely we are getting closer to licking the hair loss thing for good. I still believe we are at least a decade rather than just a few years away from solving hair loss though. But this is a great addition to the ongoing discoveries that may lead to a cure.

Post Reply


Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 78 guests