How to purify photoreceptors from retina grown in a dish

9 Sep 2015, 4:54 p.m.

Image shows Rhodopsin CD73

Work recently published in Stem Cells has shown that photoreceptor cells can be grown and purified in the lab before being transplanted into a mature host retina. This research, led by BRC-supported Professor Jane Sowden, suggests that cell replacement therapy involving the transplantation of new photoreceptor cells, isolated from retina grown in a dish, may be a possible treatment for blindness.Retinal diseases causing loss of the light-sensing photoreceptor cells in the retina are a major cause of blindness worldwide. These conditions are largely untreatable. Current research is aiming to develop photoreceptor cell therapy as a future treatment for blindness due to photoreceptor cell death.

Stem cell cultures offer an inexhaustible source of new photoreceptor cells for cell therapy. Stem cells grown under certain conditions have the ability to form three dimensional eye cups containing layers of retinal cells resembling the embryonic eye.

In this study, the team showed for the first time that photoreceptor cells suitable for transplantation can be isolated from stem cell-derived retina using specific tags, termed biomarkers, which are located on the surface of the cells.

The next step following these proof-of-concept studies is to develop similar strategies for the purification of human photoreceptor cells from stem cell cultures for clinical photoreceptor cell therapy.

New treatment for brain tumour approved after over 20 years of research

The first-ever targeted treatment for brain tumours in children has been approved for NHS patients, following decades of research by a Great Ormond Street consultant.

Help pioneer new treatments for millions of people this DNA Day

DNA Day is coming up this Thursday (25 April) and the team behind the DNA, Children + Young People’s Health Resource (D-CYPHR) are encouraging children and young people to contribute to important health research.

New study finds that nasal cells protect against Covid-19 in children

New research shows that children are less likely than adults to develop severe COVID because cells in their nose are better at fighting off the virus.

New plan announced to get more children access to gene therapy treatments

Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) has announced plans to revolutionise how children living with a rare disease can gain access to life-changing treatments.