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The search for viable alternatives to replace
the embryonic stem cells that are derived from the inner cell mass of an early
stage embyo, will continue. A summary of the three main types of stem cells
includes: embryonic stem cells that are found in blastocyst (an early stage
embryo), adult stem cells that are found throughout the body after embryonic
development and they divide to replace dying cells and regenerate damaged
tissue, and induced pluripotent stem cells, also called iPS cells that are
derived from an adult somatic cell using genes and viruses. The most recent
discovery in the field of stem cell research adds to the growing list cells
biospsied from human testicles and grown in laboratory cultures; these cell
lines are called “human adult germline stem cells.”
Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto
University in Japan and colleagues
first demonstrated in 2006 that adult mouse skin cells could be reprogrammed
into something similar with embryonic stem cells by the introduction of four
specific genes. Researchers have then managed to generate induced pluripotent
stem cells using the technique pioneered by Yamanaka. But the method used genes
and viruses: to get the genes into the cells, researchers had to use
retroviruses, which involved inserting their viral DNA into a cell’s chromosome
and pose a risk of cancer.
But
researchers have tried to improve this method by developing a safer way of
obtaining stem cells from common skin cells without using harmful viruses that
can cause cancer. Last month researchers at the Massachusetts
General Hospital and Harvard Medical School
in Boston managed
to reprogram adult skin cells into embryonic-like stem cells using adenoviruses.
The adenovirus doesn’t integrate into the genome, so the cells aren’t altered
genetically, the researchers explained.
Scientists believe that just like the
ordinary stem cells, the new types of cells could be cultured into any desired
tissue, from heart muscle cells and blood cells to brain cells.
Last week, the Japanese team led by Shinya
Yamanaka, of Kyoto
University and the
Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease found a new way to reprogram cells
without viruses. The Japanese scientists delivered the reprogramming genes into
mouse cells with the help of plasmids (small and stable circles of DNA). “Plasmids
are safe and cheap, because they can be produced in large quantities in a
laboratory, and preserved in a frozen state. It is considered a new generation
of iPS cells,” Yamanaka said.
Yamanaka’s team said they plan to try their
method using human cells. If the new method can be applied to human cells, it
may offer a safer way to test cell therapy to treat Parkinson’s or other
degenerative diseases. Japanese scientists are confident that the method will
be successful when applied to human cells as well.
Scientists say it is important to continue
exploring all these methods, including embryonic stem cell research. They believe
that the discoveries in the field of stem cell research will at least improve the
quality of life. The research will be most beneficial in improving the
understanding of the disease and providing targets for drug testing.
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