Transforming Growth Factor-beta 2 Causes an Acute Improvement in the Motor Performance of Transgenic ALS Mice
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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is fatal disorder, characterized by the loss of motoneurons. The therapeutic potential of transforming growth factor-beta 2 (TGF-beta2) was examined using SOD1 mice. The SOD1 mice were treated with TGF-beta2 by repeated intraperitoneal injections. The highest dose of TGF-beta2 caused a rapid and marked improvement in the motor performance of the mice. This improvement lasted for between 2 and 3 weeks after which the TGF-beta2-treated mice rapidly deteriorated. At postmortem, the motoneurons in the TGF-beta2-treated SOD1 mice exhibited a large hypertrophy of their nucleoli, nuclei, and axons. In contrast, TGF-beta2 did not reverse the mitochondrial pathology. This may explain why the beneficial effects of TGF-beta2 and other growth factor on SOD1 mice are transient: TGF-beta2 is stimulating the motoneurons metabolic rate while one of their key metabolic organelles is damaged. Consequently, TGF-beta2 may be therapeutic for the forms ALS, with minimal mitochondrial involvement.
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