Purest yet, liver-like cells generated from induced pluripotent stem cells
Researchers have found a better way to purify liver cells made from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). This new methodology could facilitate progress toward an important clinical goal: the treatment of patients with disease-causing mutations in their livers by transplant of unmutated liver cells derived from their own stem cells.
Unproven stem cell therapies for lung disease on the rise
Stem cell medical tourism and unproven stem cell interventions are growing and concerning issues for patients afflicted with lung disease. According to Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) researchers, there are an increasing number of clinics worldwide offering expensive stem cell-based therapies that are ineffective or have no proven benefit.
Stem cells created from diabetic foot ulcer cells might yield therapy for chronic wounds
The potential to use a patient's own cells to treat non-healing chronic wounds ? a serious complication of diabetes ? took an important step forward as researchers successfully reprogrammed skin cells taken from diabetic foot ulcers to form induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). The reprogramming technique was similar in efficiency to the results achieved using healthy foot skin from non-diabetic patients.
Discovery of new functions for blood cell protein might improve bone marrow transplantations
Tufts Medical Center and Tufts University scientists have found new functions of the protein angiogenin (ANG) that play a significant role in the regulation of blood cell formation, important in bone marrow transplantation and recovery from radiation-induced bone marrow failure. Since current bone marrow transplantations have significant limitations, these discoveries may lead to important therapeutic interventions to help improve the effectiveness of these treatments.
Bone marrow transplants have best quality of life outcomes, patients report
A large nationwide study found that people who received transplants of cells collected from a donor's bone marrow ? the original source for blood stem cell transplants, developed decades ago ? had better self-reported psychological well-being, experienced fewer symptoms of graft-vs.-host disease and were more likely to be back at work five years after transplantation than those whose transplanted cells were taken from the donor's bloodstream.
Danish stem cell scientists go to school for the day!
On May 3, 2016, a group of 25 scientists from the Danish Stem Cell Center, (DanStem), visited the Danish high school
Three Dimensional Multi-Cellular Muscle-Like Tissue Engineering in Perfusion-Based Bioreactors
The authors investigated the influence of different serum supplementations on the skeletal myoblast ability to proliferate and differentiate during three-dimensional perfusion-based culture.
test news proper
khoolase khabar