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Contact: Jonathan Weil
Phone: (212) 821-0560
E-mail: jweil@mail.med.cornell.edu
WEILL CORNELL RESEARCHERS ANNOUNCE NEW GENE THERAPY STRATEGY TO PROMOTE
HAIR GROWTH
"Biologic Switch" Accelerates Hair Growth in Mice
NEW YORK, NY (October 1, 1999) -- In a paper published in this month's
Journal
of Clinical Investigation, researchers at the Weill Medical College
of Cornell University reported that mice which were administered a gene-based
therapeutic agent to induce hair growth showed marked acceleration of the
onset of new hair growth two weeks after treatment.
The study "is a striking example of the application of 'regenerative
gene therapy' to engineer old organs back to youth," said Ronald G. Crystal,
MD, senior author of the paper and Director of the Institute of Genetic
Medicine at Weill Cornell. It follows important work by Dr. Crystal
and colleagues on using gene therapy to produce new blood vessels in the
heart in the treatment of cardiovascular disease.
Antonio M. Gotto, Jr., MD, Dean of Weill Cornell, said, "Cornell University
is proud to continue its leadership in the fields of gene therapy and genetic
medicine. This exciting work in Dr. Crystal's laboratory illustrates the
power of an approach to clinical problems that is rooted in the basic sciences."
The new strategy for hair growth uses a modified cold virus (adenovirus)
to carry a gene called "Sonic hedgehog" into the skin. Sonic hedgehog is
known to play an important role in embryonic development of many organs,
including the brain, skeleton, and hair follicles. In this example
of "regenerative gene therapy," Dr. Crystal and his colleagues theorized
that by transiently expressing this embryonic gene in the adult skin, the
result would be acceleration of growth of the normal hair follicle. The
results, dramatically demonstrated in mice, show accelerated growth of
hair in the area of treated skin.
Dr. Crystal said, "The newly produced hair shafts in treated mice had
normal hair structures, both under microscopic examination and to the naked
eye. The observations in this study may be relevant to a new approach to
therapy for hair loss, in which a gene-transfer vector provides localized,
transient acceleration of the maturation of hair follicles, resulting in
hair growth. For example, such a strategy may be beneficial in accelerating
hair growth following chemotherapy."
© 1999 New York Presbyterian
Hospital
Weill Medical College of Cornell
University
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