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Tissue Engineers Grow Penis
- With Feeling |
Tissue engineers who recently demonstrated penis replacement
in animals have now added a vital missing component - nerve cells.
"The nerve cells are very important - they are responsible for all
the sensory function," says Anthony Atala, at Boston Children's Hospital. "In
order to do complete [penile] replacements we need to make sure all of the parts
are there, including the nerves."
In September 2002, Atala and his colleagues replaced missing chunks of
penis in live rabbits with tissues grown in the lab. But the replacement penile tissues
consisted only of muscle and endothelial cells, which were inserted alongside intact
nerve cells. Their new work is the first time that penile nerve tissue has been regenerated.
"This is exciting and extends their work logically in several directions,"
says reconstructive surgeon Hunter Wessells of the University of Washington School
of Medicine in Seattle.
The regeneration of nerves is an important step towards one day creating
engineered replacement penile tissue for men who have lost parts of the penis following
prostate cancer surgery or an accident, or to enhance the genitals of children born
with abnormalities.
Mimicking nature
The secret to regrowing the nerve cells is mimicking nature, explains
Atala. His team began by building millimetre-wide collagen channels. These replicate
the sheaths that, like the insulation around a bundle of electrical wires, surround
nerves in the body.
The team then cut away the nerve cells in the penises of live rats and
sewed the collagen channels to the severed nerve stumps. After three months, functional
nerve cells one centimetre long had grown inside the channels.
The physical support from the collagen appeared to be all that was needed
to coax the nerve cells into growing. The collagen-supported cells grew just as well
as nerves that were grafted on in experiments conducted for comparison.
The next challenge will be encouraging them to grow to even greater lengths
without losing their functionality, says Atala.
Splice and connect
In the next few years, Wessels envisions using the technique to solve
the "challenging problem" of returning feeling, or just the ability to
have an erection, to men with intact penises who have lost nerve function.
But he says it will be closer to 10 years before a fully-functional tissue
engineered penis is grown in the lab and attached to a man or child. That will require
overcoming the challenge of splicing and connecting nerves in the lab-grown penis
to the central nervous system, he warns.
The new research was presented by Atala at the annual meeting of the American
Urological Association in Chicago on Tuesday. |