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A new project was launched today by a UC Irvine research
team lead by Hans Keirstead. The final goal of the project is to develop stem
cell lines that genetically match human patients.
“This technique holds tremendous promise to advance our
knowledge of stem cells and their potential to cure disease,” said Keirstead,
associate professor of anatomy and neurobiology and co-director of UCI’s Sue
and Bill Gross Stem Cell Research
Center. “I am excited to
embark on this line of research and look forward to the day when
patient-specific stem cells are utilized to treat people suffering from
debilitating injuries and health conditions.”
These lines would provide would provide the basis for
potential patient-specific stem cell treatments.
In order to achieve his goal, Keirstead will use a technique
called somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). A patient’s DNA is transplanted
into a donated unfertilized egg cell in order to generate stem cell lines with
the same genetic makeup of the patient.
Stem cells are the cells that give rise to each of the
specialized cells within the human body. During organ and tissue development,
the stem cells transform into a particular specialized cell, such as a heart
cell or a liver cell. If researchers can control the processes directing stem
cell transformation, they may one day be able to use these cells as a source of
healthy replacement cells for diseased or injured tissues.
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