
GEN News: Drug promotes nervous system repair in animal models of stroke
Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News recently featured research from the University of Cincinnati's Agnes (Yu) Luo, PhD.
Luo and her colleagues recently published a preclinical study in the journal Cell Reports showing a new drug may help repair damage caused by strokes. The drug was shown to be effective at repairing the nervous system in animal models of stroke.
“We are very excited about the data showing significant improvement in motor function, sensory function, spatial learning, and memory, even when treatment was initiated as late as seven days after stroke onset,” said Luo, associate professor in the Department of Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry in UC’s College of Medicine and the study’s senior author.
There are currently no FDA approved drugs to repair damage caused by a stroke, and Luo said the drug would be a “substantial breakthrough” if the early results translate into clinical settings.
Read more about Luo's research.
Featured photo at top courtesy of Unsplash.
Related Stories
Biomedical engineering students get to heart of cardiovascular...
September 25, 2025
Associate Professor LaShan Hendrix is studying the cellular causes behind heart attacks and strokes to find ways to prevent them.
From Cincinnati to the global stage: alumni share paths to legal...
September 24, 2025
UC Law's LLM graduates keynote virtual conversation to highlight career paths for graduates.
Renowned sculptor and UC grad talks about his public art
September 24, 2025
UC graduate and renowned sculptor Tom Tsuchiya talks to CET about his many public works of art, including his latest, a bust of 700-WLW radio announcer Marty Brennaman that was unveiled in September outside Great American Ball Park.