Breast milk contains stem cells
Monday, 11 February 2008
ScienceNetwork WA
By Catherine Madden
The Perth scientist who made the world-first discovery that human breast milk contains stem cells is confident that
within five years scientists will be harvesting them to research treatment for conditions as far-reaching as spinal
injuries, diabetes and Parkinson’s disease.
But what Dr Mark Cregan is excited about right now is the promise that his discovery could be the start of many more
exciting revelations about the potency of breast milk.
He believes that it not only meets all the nutritional needs of a growing infant but contains key markers that guide his
or her development into adulthood.
“We already know how breast milk provides for the baby’s nutritional needs, but we are only just beginning to understand
that it probably performs many other functions,” says Dr Cregan, a molecular biologist at The University of Western
Australia.
He says that, in essence, a new mother’s mammary glands take over from the placenta to provide the development guidance
to ensure a baby’s genetic destiny is fulfilled.
“It is setting the baby up for the perfect development,” he says. “We already know that babies who are breast fed have
an IQ advantage and that there’s a raft of other health benefits. Researchers also believe that the protective effects
of being breast fed continue well into adult life.
“The point is that many mothers see milks as identical – formula milk and breast milk look the same so they must be the
same. But we know now that they are quite different and a lot of the effects of breast milk versus formula don’t become
apparent for decades. Formula companies have focussed on matching breast milk’s nutritional qualities but formula can
never provide the developmental guidance.”
It was Dr Cregan’s interest in infant health that led him to investigate the complex cellular components of human milk.
“I was looking at this vast complexity of cells and I thought, ‘No one knows anything about them’.”
His hunch was that if breast milk contains all these cells, surely it has their precursors, too?
His team cultured cells from human breast milk and found a population that tested positive for the stem cell marker,
nestin. Further analysis showed that a side population of the stem cells were of multiple lineages with the potential to
differentiate into multiple cell types. This means the cells could potentially be “reprogrammed” to form many types of
human tissue.
He presented his research at the end of January to 200 of the world’s leading experts in the field at the International
Conference of the Society for Research on Human Milk and Lactation in Perth.
“We have shown these cells have all the physical characteristics of stem cells. What we will do next is to see if they
behave like stem cells,” he says.
If so, they promise to provide researchers with an entirely ethical means of harvesting stem cells for research without
the debate that has dogged the harvesting of cells from embryos.
Further research on immune cells, which have also been found in breast milk and have already been shown to survive the
baby’s digestive process, could provide a pathway to developing targets to beat certain viruses or bacteria.
A story provided by ScienceNetwork WA - Activate your connections to science.