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Cloning and Hair Multiplication, an
Update
Dear patient, one of the most
frequent question I get asked in the office
is "Doc, how long until they can
clone hair?". It seem crazy that
a sheep or dog can be cloned, and yet
a simple hair follicle cannot. Below is
an article on Foxnews...
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Scientists
Fight Male-Pattern Baldness
Tuesday, November 15, 2005
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NEW YORK - Look around a crowd,
and you'll see that lots of middle-aged
men are losing their hair. As Baby Boomers,
they have every right to demand, "What
is science doing about this?" Quite
a bit, it turns out.
A British company, for example, says
five guys are walking around with hundreds
more hairs than they had before, thanks
to an early test of what's been called
hair cloning. An American outfit hopes
to start testing a similar approach next
year.
Other scientists are tracking down genes
that make some men susceptible to hair
loss, and struggling to understand the
mysterious biology behind it. For example,
how can men lose hair on the top of their
heads while their beards and even eyelashes
keep going strong?
Black men are far less susceptible, but
about a third of 30-year-old white men
have signs of what doctors call male-pattern
baldness. By the time they're 50,
about half of them do.
The condition creeps across the head
like three tiny armies bent on deforestation:
one starting at the back, and two making
inroads from the front.
Sure, some men say bald is beautiful.
And others can smear on minoxidil (Rogaine)
or take Propecia pills, or get hair transplants.
In fact, right now is "the best time
in history to be going bald, because there's
an awful lot of things that can be done,"
says Dr. Ken Washenik of the Aderans Research
Institute in Philadelphia, which is investigating
the "hair cloning" approach.
But the drugs don't help everybody,
and not everyone is interested in a transplant.
So there's room for new approaches.
To understand the search for new treatments,
it helps to know a little about hair and
male pattern baldness. (Women can also
get hormone-induced baldness like this,
but it's not clear if it's really
the same condition).
Everybody starts out with a lifetime
supply of about 100,000 follicles on the
scalp, each primed to produce a single
hair shaft. Normally, any given follicle
pumps out that shaft for two years to
six years, then takes a break for a few
weeks. Then it sheds that hair, and starts
the cycle over again.
Each day, we lose about 100 hairs this
way. No big deal; about an equal number
of follicles enter the growth phase on
the same day, and at any one time about
90 percent to 95 percent of the follicles
are busy growing new hair.
But in some men, in selected places on
the scalp, this orderly process goes awry.
The hair-growing phase gets progressively
shorter and the resting phase gets longer.
So the resulting hairs get shorter and
shorter with each trip through the cycle.
Eventually, they don't even poke out
through the scalp.
What's more, affected follicles take
longer to start growing hair again after
they've shed the last one. And they
shrink, so the hair they produce is finer.
On your head, it's like replacing
mighty trees with saplings. And the total
number of remaining hairs slips by about
5 percent a year.
What causes this? The full picture isn't
known, but it clearly involves a combination
of genetic susceptibility and hormones,
including testosterone.
Researchers are eager to identify the
biochemical actors within follicles that
could be manipulated to fight baldness.
As for genetics, some studies have implicated
a particular gene that may be necessary
to get the condition but not sufficient
to produce baldness on its own, said Stephen
Harrap of the University of Melbourne
in Australia.
In all, it might take inheriting certain
versions of about five genes to get the
condition, like getting a bad poker hand,
suggested Rodney Sinclair of the university.
In England, meanwhile, a company called
Intercytex has just begun human studies
of an approach sometimes called hair cloning.
It focuses on a particular kind of cell,
found at the base of the follicle, that
can team up with skin cells to produce
new follicles.
Here's the idea: Extract some cells
from the areas of a man's head that
resist balding, put them in a lab dish
and expand their numbers by thousands
of times. Then inject these new cells
back into the scalp, where they'll
work with skin cells to form new follicles.
So, unlike transplants, the guy actually
ends up with more hairs than he started
with.
The company has recently tested this
on seven men with thinning hair due to
male
pattern baldness, and five of them
gained hair, says Intercytex chief scientific
officer Paul Kemp. This was just an initial
study to look for side effects like inflammation,
Kemp says, and no such problems appeared.
Not that this restored a full head of
hair. The treated areas were just the
size of a quarter, and covered places
that already had hair, rather than bald
spots.
"We didn't want to create these
weird and wonderful patterns on their
head," Kemp said. "It's
such a small area in the hairy area anyway,
I would be surprised if they really knew
any difference."
Eventually, if further studies go well,
the technique could allow hair transplant
surgeons to cover more of a bald head,
Kemp said. The next round of human research
is expected to start next summer.
"You would be going thin, and you'd
be maintained," Kemp said.
"Sometime in the future, I think
baldness will be a choice rather than
something you have to suffer," said
Kemp. "Any bald people will have
chosen to be bald."
Within five years, Kemp says, his company
may have a commercial product.
Washenik, of the Aderans Institute, said
his group's efforts in hair cloning
have shown promise so far in mice. He
hopes studies in people can begin next
year.
He said follicles that grow from the
transplanted cells should resist balding,
because they come from a part of the head
that balding doesn't touch. Ordinary
hair transplants show that follicles from
these resistant regions stay resistant
even when planted in bald regions, he
said.
But even if the transplanted cells do
eventually succumb, "you've got
years of hair on your scalp that's
of benefit to you," said Washenik,
who also works for a hair transplantation
business called Bosley.
Ultimately, he said, scientists would
love to accomplish the same goal with
a cream that can be smeared on the scalp
and deliver just the right chemical signals
to stimulate new follicles to grow.
In any case, he said, it's not just
about hair.
Hair follicles, after all, are organs.
So what's learned from follicle research
may help other scientists who are working
to regenerate bigger organs like the liver
and kidneys, Washenik said.
The same notion was expressed by Sinclair,
who's testing a skin cream in mice
that may alter follicle behavior by fiddling
with genes. (He says he can't discuss
the results because they are a commercial
secret.)
Sinclair said follicle research allows
scientists to approach not just organ
regeneration, but also questions about
stem cells, cell growth and gene therapy
that may pay off someday in new treatments
for diseases like cancer and Alzheimer's.
"The idea of growing hair on a bald
scalp is only of moderate interest,"
Sinclair said in a telephone interview.
"If we find the cure for baldness
we're not going to stop studying hair."
That's just great, Doc.
But if you do find the cure for baldness,
lots of men would like to know.
Story from www.foxnews.com
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