Explainer: What are stem cells?

Posted: May 20, 2013 at 8:52 pm

Javascript is currently disabled in your web browser. For full site functionality, it is necessary to enable Javascript. In order to enable it, please see these instructions. 11 hours ago by Merlin Crossley, The Conversation Credit: euthman

In a paper published in Cell yesterday, scientists from the US and Thailand have, for the first time, successfully produced embryonic stem cells from human skin cells.

That sounds interesting, but what are stem cells and where do they come from?

If you take a limb from a rose tree, and put it in soil, it will grow into a thriving bush.

But you might say: "Plants are special. This won't work with animals." Or will it? If you cut off a lizard's tail, a new tail may grow. A lobster can grow back a lost claw.

There is a special type of flatworm that can be cut in half, again and again hundreds of times, and each half grows back into a full worm.

Similarly, if you cut out half a human liver, it will grow back. The story of Prometheus, whose liver was eaten away by eagles and regrew each day, suggests that the Greeks of ancient times knew about regeneration of organs.

This sort of regeneration is attributed to special cells called "stem cells".

Reprogramming the workers

Most of our cells are like many professional workers they are hardened in their ways and can't manage career changes.

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Explainer: What are stem cells?

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