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From left to right, researchers José Antonio del Río and Arnau Hervera (Photo: IBEC).
 09.03.2020

Identified a new repairing mechanism of the peripheral nervous system by applyting bioengineering techniques

A research group at the Institute of Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) at the Barcelona Science Park has applied a new light-stimulated technique to modulate muscular activity and stimulate cell regeneration of the peripheral nervous system. Thanks to this research, published in Cells, the scientists have discovered that muscle activity can activate the neurons and accelerate their regeneration after an injury. 

 

Injuries in the peripheral nervous system are a major health problem and a challenge for medicine. Currently, most of the therapies are based on post-injury surgery. However, these interventions have low efficiency in terms of restoring lost functions.

A research group at IBEC led by José Antonio del Río, Principal Investigator of the Cellular and Molecular Neurobiotechnology and Arnau Hervera, Post-Doctoral researcher in the same group, have developed a device —lab-on-a-chip— to study and repair injuries in the nervous system by combining two technologies based in bioengineering.

Microfluidics —which uses sistems that process or manipulate very small quantities of fluids through channels with the aim of studying the response to different stimuli— and optogenetics —which combines light and genetic engineering to control the neuronal activity—. This last one is extremely useful in neurobiology because enables the modulation of cellular activity using light, without the need of electrical field stimulation, which is nonspecific and can cause cell damage.

Thanks to the combination of both techniques’ experts have discovered that the muscle sends regenerative signals to the neurons in order to promote reconnexion and restorage of functions and contraction control which was lost after the injury.

According to Arnau Hervera, this discovery “allows a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying motor neuron injuries”, a type of cells responsible for producing the stimuli that cause the contraction of different muscle groups in the organism. Accordingly, the researchers add that this finding “opens a pop-up window so that in the future the effects of current rehabilitation therapies can be improved”.

The authors of this work, in which the Nanobioengineering group at IBEC led by Josep Samitier director of the Institute, underline the possible use of this methodology to model the study of other diseases of the nervous system such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), whose origin is related to the death of motor neurons.

Reference article: Sala-Jarque, F. Mesquida-Veny, M. Badiola-Mateos, J. Samitier, A. Hervera, J. A. del Río (2020). Neuromuscular Activity Induces Paracrine Signaling and Triggers Axonal Regrowth after Injury in Microfluidic Lab‐On‐Chip Devices. Cells, volume 9, issue 2

► For further information: IBEC website [+]