Blood Cells Programmed to Get Embryonic Stem Cells
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23 April 2009
Washington, USA
The breakthrough provides a readily accessible source of stem cells and an alternative to harvesting embryonic stem cells
Researchers have reprogrammed blood cells into cells that are functionally indistinguishable from embryonic stem cells, which are used to treat a multitude of diseases.
The breakthrough provides a readily accessible source of stem cells and an alternative to harvesting embryonic stem cells, reports IANS.
Embryonic stem cells have long been coveted for their potential to treat a multitude of diseases as a result of their unique properties of nearly indefinite self–renewal and pluripotency–the ability to develop into any cell type.
However, their use has been the subject of political controversy.
“Our findings provide the first proof that cells from human blood can morph into stem cells,” said senior study author George Q Daley, investigator for the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Children’s Hospital at Boston.
“Making pluripotent stem cells from blood, which is one of the easiest tissues to obtain, provides an easy strategy for generating patient–specific stem cells that are valuable research tools and may one day be used to treat a number of diseases,” Daley said.
To generate induced pluripotent stem cells (dubbed iPS cells), blood was collected from a 26–year–old male donor.
From the blood sample, the researchers isolated CD34+ cells, a type of stem cell that produces only blood cells, and cultured them in growth factors for six days to increase their number.
During the culture, the scientists infected the CD34+ cells with viruses carrying reprogramming factors, genes normally expressed in embryonic stem cells that can reset the blood cells to an embryonic state.
Colonies of cells exhibiting physical characteristics similar to embryonic stem (ES) cells appeared about two weeks after the procedure.
To determine whether these cells were also functionally similar to ES cells, the scientists analysed the CD34+ iPS cell lines to see if they had acquired stem cell “Markers”, the unique combination of proteins that coat the cells, surface and distinguish them from other types of cells.
Indeed, the iPS cell lines expressed the same markers as ES cells and further shared the capacity to differentiate into a variety of specialised cell types, said a Howard Hughes release.
The findings were published online in Blood, the official journal of the American Society of Hematology.
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