Dr. Cotsarelis breakthrough Discovery (June 2nd, 2013)

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  • Westonci
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2010
    • 254

    Dr. Cotsarelis breakthrough Discovery (June 2nd, 2013)

    Researchers in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania have determined the role of a key growth factor, found in skin cells of limited quantities in humans, which helps hair follicles form and regenerate during the wound healing process. When this growth factor, called Fgf9, was overexpressed in a mouse model, there was a two- to three-fold increase in the number of new hair follicles produced. Researchers believe that this growth factor could be used therapeutically for people with various hair and scalp disorders. The study appears in an advance online publication of Nature Medicine.


    The findings help explain why humans don't regenerate their hair after wounding," said senior author George Cotsarelis, MD, professor and chair of Dermatology. "The study also points us to a way to treat wounds and grow hair." Following up on earlier work, which showed that increased signaling from the Wnt pathway doubled the number of new hair follicles, the Penn team looked further upstream in the pathway and identified an important cascade of signals that prompt further expression, as well as perpetuate and amplify signals sent during a crucial phase of hair-follicle regeneration. Fgf9 is initially secreted from gamma delta T cells, an unconventional, rare subset of T cells involved in the immune response. Once released, Fgf9 serves as the catalyst for a signal sent via the dermal Wnt pathway. The signal prompts further expression of Fgf9 in structural cells called fibroblasts, and adds to the generation of new hair follicles. When a wound occurs in an adult person, hair follicle growth is blocked and the skin heals with a scar. However, hair does regenerate to a great extent in the wound-healing process in mice. The team compared how the process works in adult mice versus humans. Humans have low numbers of gamma delta T cells in their skin compared to mice, and this may explain why human skin scars but does not regenerate hair follicles. In adult mice, the amount of Fgf9 secreted modulates hair-follicle regeneration after wounding. When Fgf9 was reduced, there was a decrease in wound-induced hair follicle growth. Conversely, when Fgf9 was increased, there was a two- to three-fold increase in the number of new hair follicles, equal to the amount seen in the mice expressing Wnt. Importantly, when the investigators added Fgf9 back to the wounds that do not normally regenerate, FGF9 triggered the molecular cascade of events necessary for skin and hair regeneration; thus, leaving the door open for using Fgf9 to treat wounds and hair loss in people. The Penn team suggests that, given the differences in skin development and regeneration in response to wounding, treatments intended to compensate for the lack of Fgf9 may be most effective if timed with a wounding response. "Testing activators of Fgf9 or Wnt pathways during the wound healing process may be warranted," they stated.


    Link to Nature Article

  • john2399
    Senior Member
    • Jan 2012
    • 527

    #2
    yawnn

    Comment

    • bigentries
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2011
      • 465

      #3
      Originally posted by john2399
      yawnn
      Well, it's true that this isn't going to grow hair in the near future, but at least it points out why former attempts to regrow hair with wounding have been a failure.

      There have been reported cases of complete regeneration with experimental cancer drugs and a trigger (usually a sunburn). I think we are going to the right direction

      Comment

      • Pentarou
        Senior Member
        • Apr 2013
        • 484

        #4
        Has anything that Cotsarelis has ever done ever helped us at all in any way?

        Comment

        • 534623
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2011
          • 1865

          #5
          Originally posted by Pentarou
          Has anything that Cotsarelis has ever done ever helped us at all in any way?
          Absolutely! For example ...

          I have a mouse and a cat and my cat always bits my mouse - voilà! - perfect mouse wound-healing due to Cotsarelis research!

          Comment

          • hellouser
            Senior Member
            • May 2012
            • 4423

            #6
            Originally posted by Pentarou
            Has anything that Cotsarelis has ever done ever helped us at all in any way?
            That question should put a stamp on him being a failure. Same goes for Lauster with his laziness.

            Comment

            • goldbondmafia
              Senior Member
              • Oct 2011
              • 406

              #7
              what ever happened to the lotion he was making ???? I thought it he had it tested and it actually worked (if I remember correctly). Then again I don't know if it worked on humans...

              Comment

              • Pentarou
                Senior Member
                • Apr 2013
                • 484

                #8
                Originally posted by goldbondmafia
                what ever happened to the lotion he was making ???? I thought it he had it tested and it actually worked (if I remember correctly). Then again I don't know if it worked on humans...
                There is no lotion, it's just something that the Daily Mail made up (this is a newspaper that denies climate change and was strongly anti vaccine!)

                Comment

                • garethbale
                  Senior Member
                  • Apr 2012
                  • 605

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Pentarou
                  There is no lotion, it's just something that the Daily Mail made up (this is a newspaper that denies climate change and was strongly anti vaccine!)
                  Hi Pantarou

                  Random off-topic question but did you say you were doing ACCA? I replied back when you messaged me but the admins got rid of the message board function.

                  I have my audit exam this Thursday and Corporate Governance one next week...

                  P.S. Sorry guys for being off-topic

                  Comment

                  • Pentarou
                    Senior Member
                    • Apr 2013
                    • 484

                    #10
                    No, I'm not doing it myself, but I know people who are. :?
                    )

                    Comment

                    • UK_
                      Senior Member
                      • Feb 2011
                      • 2744

                      #11
                      Originally posted by garethbale
                      Hi Pantarou

                      Random off-topic question but did you say you were doing ACCA? I replied back when you messaged me but the admins got rid of the message board function.

                      I have my audit exam this Thursday and Corporate Governance one next week...
                      P.S. Sorry guys for being off-topic
                      Subbed thread, added to favourites.

                      Guys this looks v interesting. Dont touch that dial.

                      Comment

                      • Thinning87
                        Senior Member
                        • Dec 2012
                        • 847

                        #12
                        Very interesting article, thanks for sharing. This is very important as it gives an official explanation to why the original thoughts of Cots's team from two years ago were off. But it also gives new insight into the problem and I find it hard to believe that their team will just give up like that.

                        Comment

                        • Thinning87
                          Senior Member
                          • Dec 2012
                          • 847

                          #13
                          Ehm.... so folks... apparently this news is much more interesting than it looks like from the article linked in this thread:

                          Creativity can be learned, and everyone can develop good copy. One Led Inc's Lead Copywriter Brianne Dromey showed us a complete framework on how to ace the process and write unique headlines.


                          Not only is Follica not dead, but they are very much up to something good

                          Comment

                          • garethbale
                            Senior Member
                            • Apr 2012
                            • 605

                            #14
                            good find, but I wouldn't have bothered posting it. You'll only get people bashing it.

                            Comment

                            • goldbondmafia
                              Senior Member
                              • Oct 2011
                              • 406

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Thinning87
                              Ehm.... so folks... apparently this news is much more interesting than it looks like from the article linked in this thread:

                              Creativity can be learned, and everyone can develop good copy. One Led Inc's Lead Copywriter Brianne Dromey showed us a complete framework on how to ace the process and write unique headlines.


                              Not only is Follica not dead, but they are very much up to something good
                              And that's from this year correct? That's pretty good news that they are still working at it.

                              Comment

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