The Thoughts of a Frumpy Professor

............................................ ............................................ A blog devoted to the ramblings of a small town, middle aged college professor as he experiences life and all its strange variances.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

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New Way For Stem Cells



The following article from Science News identifies a new method to study and utilize stem cell therapies WITHOUT the need for embryonic stem cells. It could help to further develop this technology while at the same time curtailing the controversy inherent in the process as it stands now with most focus being on using embryonic stem cells.

For my own philosophy, I am not comfortable with the use of embryonic stem cells. So, for me, this is a great new path that could truly open the door to a wonderful new scientific methodology.

Stem Cell Advance Uses Cloning: Method Using Eggs to do Reprogramming is Successful in Humans

By Tina Hesman Saey in Science News
Thursday, October 6th, 2011

The same technology that is used to clone animals can induce human eggs to reprogram adult cells to a primitive embryonic-like state. The accomplishment, reported in the Oct. 6 Nature, may one day help researchers develop a source of stem cells that could be used to replace a patient’s own cells.

Scientists had previously shown through cloning experiments that egg cells from many different kinds of animals could perform the feat, but until now, there was no evidence that human eggs could do it.

“There was a big question mark whether this was indeed possible,” says Dieter Egli, a researcher at the New York Stem Cell Foundation.

Though promising from a research perspective, the stem cells Egli and his colleagues produced can’t be used to treat patients.

“This is only partial success,” says George Q. Daley, a stem cell researcher at Children’s Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School. That’s because the newly created stem cells contain three sets of chromosomes instead of the usual two.

The extra chromosomes come from the egg, which contains one set of chromosomes that a woman would pass along to her offspring. In animal cloning, researchers remove the chromosome-containing nucleus from the egg and replace it with the nucleus from an adult cell. Something in the egg causes the adult cell to revert back to its earliest primordial stage so it acts like a fertilized egg and creates an embryo.

But when researchers tried that technique with human cells, the resulting cells stopped dividing after only four or five rounds. The scientists could reprogram adult cells only when they inserted adult cell nuclei into eggs that retained their own nucleus. So the resulting embryonic cells contain one set of chromosomes from the egg and the normal two sets from the adult cell.

The researchers hope that they will eventually develop ways of removing the egg chromosomes and still reprogram the adult cell. Egli thinks that if the researchers can pull out the egg’s nucleus after the reprogramming but before the two nuclei have a chance to merge, they can create stem cells that might be used in patients.

Regardless of the clinical applications of the newly created stem cells, the study is a “landmark,” says Daley. “We’re still trying to understand the basic mechanism of reprogramming.”

The new cells may help scientists correct flaws in another technology that is used to create stem cells without using embryos. Stem cells called induced pluripotent stem cells are created by transforming adult cells directly into embryonic-like cells by adding a cocktail of proteins. The technology holds great promise, but researchers have recently discovered that the reprogramming in the transformed cells is incomplete (SN: 8/14/10, p. 15; SN: 10/9/10, p. 28). Cancer or other problems might result if such cells were transplanted into a person.

With the new cloning technique, researchers may be able to figure out how the egg reprograms cells. That knowledge could then aid scientists in finding the missing ingredients that could be added to current gene cocktails to make direct, complete reprogramming possible.

Egli and his colleagues don’t yet know what the missing ingredients are, but speculate that they are either contained within the egg’s nucleus or associated with it.


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I am still feeling out of sorts today, but I am making myself to do the usual tricks to force myself (hopefully) into a better frame of mind. Also, in case anyone is still interested, I will post the (delayed) conclusion to the "A Grand Day!" essay on Friday.

PipeTobacco

2 Comments:

Blogger BBC said...

I'm just trying to figure how how to get dead before I'm so old that I'm helpless and shitting in a diaper again.

Thursday, 13 October, 2011  
Blogger H@rry said...

BBC - Pretty simple, do you have a gun?

Friday, 14 October, 2011  

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