Author Topic: Researchers find easier way to make stem cells  (Read 1460 times)

MicroBalrog

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Researchers find easier way to make stem cells
« on: October 13, 2008, 06:50:10 AM »
Researchers find easier way to make stem cells
Sun Oct 12, 2008 1:10pm EDT

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers trying to find ways to transform ordinary skin cells into powerful stem cells said on Sunday they found a shortcut by "sprinkling" a chemical onto the cells.

Adding the chemical allowed the team at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute in Massachusetts to use just two genes to transform ordinary human skin cells into more powerful induced pluripotent stem cells or iPS cells.

"This study demonstrates there's a possibility that instead of using genes and viruses to reprogram cells, one can use chemicals," said Dr. Doug Melton, who directed the study published in the journal Nature Biotechnology.

Melton said Danwei Huangfu, a postdoctoral researcher in his lab, developed the new method.

"The exciting thing about Danwei's work is you can see for the first time that you could sprinkle chemicals on cells and make stem cells," Melton, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, said in a statement.

Stem cells are the body's master cells, giving rise to all the tissues, organs and blood. Embryonic stem cells are considered the most powerful kinds of stem cells, as they have the potential to give rise to any type of tissue.

Doctors hope to someday use them to transform medicine. Melton, for instance, wants to find a way to regenerate the pancreatic cells destroyed in type 1 diabetes and perhaps cure that disease.

INSERTING GENES

But pluripotent stem cells such as the embryonic cells are difficult to make, requiring the use of an embryo or cloning technology. Many people also object to their use, and several countries, including the United States, limit funding for such experiments.

In the past year, several teams of scientists have reported finding a handful of genes that can transform ordinary skin cells into iPS cells, which look and act like embryonic stem cells.

To get these genes into the cells, they have had to use retroviruses, which integrate their own genetic material into the cells they infect. This can be dangerous and can cause tumors and perhaps other effects.

Last month U.S. researchers did the same thing using a harmless virus called an adenovirus, but the method was not efficient. And last week, Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University in Japan, who discovered iPS cells in mice, used a loop of genetic material called a plasmid to reformat the cells.

Huangfu tried treating the cells first with valproic acid. After she did this, it only took two of the four usual genes to reprogram the cells into iPS cells, she reported.

This is good because the other two genes usually needed can promote cancer.

The Melton team used retroviruses to carry the two genes in but suggest they might not be necessary.

"These results support the possibility of reprogramming through purely chemical means, which would make therapeutic use of reprogrammed cells safer and more practical," they wrote in their report.

Huangfu said the valproic acid unraveled the chromatin -- the physical structure of the chromosomes -- making it possible to get in and alter the DNA more easily.

"We may need two types of chemicals, one to loosen the chromatin structure, and one to reprogram. We are looking for that reprogramming chemical, and it should be possible to find it eventually," she said.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

© Thomson Reuters 2008.
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Perd Hapley

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Re: Researchers find easier way to make stem cells
« Reply #1 on: October 13, 2008, 07:05:30 AM »
Cool.

Didn't they also find a work-around, a year or two ago, to get embryonic stem cells without ethical objections? 
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seeker_two

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Re: Researchers find easier way to make stem cells
« Reply #2 on: October 13, 2008, 04:41:44 PM »
It's even easier than that....

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/10/09/MNC813DJU1.DTL&type=science

Quote
Testicle cells may rival embryonic stem cells
Seth Borenstein, Associated Press

Thursday, October 9, 2008

(10-09) 04:00 PDT Washington - --

Cells taken from men's testicles seem as versatile as the stem cells derived from embryos, researchers reported Wednesday in what may be yet another new approach in a burgeoning scientific field.

The new type of stem cells could be useful for growing personalized replacement tissues, according to a study in today's issue of the journal Nature. But because of their source, their highest promise would apply to only half the world's population: men.

Embryonic stem cells can give rise to virtually any tissue in the body and scientists believe they may offer treatments for diseases like Parkinson's and diabetes and for spinal cord injuries.

The new cells were created from sperm-making cells obtained from testicular biopsies of 22 men. They are theoretically superior to traditional embryonic stem cells because they can be obtained directly from male patients and used to grow replacement tissues that their bodies won't reject.

The testicular cells also avoid the ethical dilemma of embryonic stem cells, which are harvested in a process that destroys the embryos. For that reason, some people, including President Bush, oppose their use for ethical or religious reasons.

"The advantage these cells have in comparison to embryonic stem cells is that there is no ethical problem with these cells and that they are natural," said study lead author Thomas Skutella, a professor at the Center for Regenerative Biology and Medicine in Tuebingen, Germany.

The German researchers obtained biopsies from men ages 17 to 81. They extracted the individual testicular cells and grew them in laboratory dishes. After about three weeks, some of the cells formed colonies that resembled embryonic stem cells, the team reported.

They found that the "germline" stem cells grew nearly as fast as embryonic stem cells and produced many of the specialized protein markers that are associated with embryonic stem cells.

Cells from eight of the patients were injected into mice, where they grew into jumbles of tissue that included cartilage, muscle, nerve cells, and other building blocks of glands and internal organs, according to the study.

Using testicular cells isn't the only promising method that avoids embryos; there have been impressive experiments in reprogramming ordinary body cells into stem cells by slipping certain genes into them.

The new findings and the reprogrammed cells - which still have technical hurdles - "take some pressure off the stem cell issue," White House science adviser Jack Marburger said.

Earlier studies showed promise using what are called spermatogonial cells from the testes of mice. The new study used cells taken from biopsied tissue from 22 different men undergoing various medical treatments. Researchers found that after a few weeks of growth, the cells could differentiate into various types of cells just like those taken from embryos.

Other scientists hailed the idea as promising but not a reason to give up on research on embryonic stem cells.

"It's exciting. We could do it for males; that leaves women without as easy a method," said stem cell scientist George Daley of Children's Hospital in Boston and the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. He was not part of the new research.

Embryonic stem cells "have their own place in biology," Daley said.

Skutella said a female equivalent could be found in women's egg cells, but Daley said that's unlikely because of the makeup of those cells.

Using the new findings to treat patients could take years. But Daley said the work on the cells from testes can benefit from a decade's worth of research into embryonic cells and advance at a fast pace.

He said the new research showed how similar these testicular cells are to embryonic stem cells; now science needs to see what specific differences exist, because those could be important.


The Los Angeles Times contributed to this report.


...that is, if we have the cojones for it....  =D
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Kwelz

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Re: Researchers find easier way to make stem cells
« Reply #3 on: October 13, 2008, 04:46:44 PM »
I also think they can get them from the Placenta and Cord. 
I think stem Cell research is vital for humanity, the only objection I have ever had is when the are obtained though abortion. 

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Re: Researchers find easier way to make stem cells
« Reply #4 on: October 13, 2008, 05:22:49 PM »
Placenta stem cells:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placenta_stem_cells

They've also been researching the uses for adipose (fat) derived stem cells. They've managed to create bone, cartilage, muscle, and fat from them.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adult_stem_cell#Adipose_derived_adult_stem_cells

They even replaced part of a girl's skull.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6727466/