New type of human stem cell created in lab

Posted: September 15, 2014 at 1:45 am

London, Sept 14:

Scientists have created a new type of human stem cell in the lab which they believe will be better at making replacement organs than existing stem cells.

In theory stem cells can develop into any kind of cell, so they could be used to repair damaged organs or even build them from scratch. But most stem cells are not that flexible, researchers said.

The best ones are pluripotent, meaning they can turn into anything. Such cells have to be taken from embryos or made by reverting adult cells to their embryonic state, called induced pluripotent stem cells, New Scientist reported.

But these pluripotent stem cells still carry genetic baggage from their previous existence. This ([baggage) has been one of the confounding problems in this area, said Austin Smith of the University of Cambridge, who led the team that developed the new cells.

The new cells have had their cellular memories wiped clean. Their genes have been cleansed of most methylation markers, so they behave more predictably and transform more consistently into other tissues.

The team hopes that this will make them a better building block for organs and tissues than existing embryonic stem cells.

Nothing has been written or drawn on them to tell them what to do or become. These cells could be a better and more pristine starting point, said Smith.

Called naive stem cells, these have long been known in mice and rats, but they have never been found in humans.

To make them, Smith and his colleagues mimicked the process that creates their mouse counterparts. They gave human embryonic stem cells extra copies of two genes, Nanog and Klf2, which triggered the gene network needed to make the naive cells.

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New type of human stem cell created in lab

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