May 03, 2004

Key Stem Cell Mechanism Discovered

Medical News Today:

Adult stem cell transplantation offers great therapeutic potential for a variety of diseases due to their ability to replenish diseased cells and tissue. While they are unique in this ability, it remains a challenge to effectively treat disease long-term with stem cells because of our inability to grow them in the laboratory. Defining the molecular switch in the stem cell replication process, or cell cycle, is a key step to stimulating their growth for broader clinical use.

In the May issue of Nature Cell Biology, Tao Cheng, M.D., assistant professor, department of radiation oncology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and colleagues report the discovery of a molecular mechanism in the cell cycle that appears to impact the replicating ability of stem cells from bone marrow and blood to fight disease.

They found that blood stem cells from mice missing a gene called p18 were much better able to multiply and grow. p18 is a molecule in a class of so-called "cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors" that are critical inhibitors of cell cycle control.

Posted by Bob King at May 3, 2004 05:14 PM | TrackBack
Related Categories: Area - Tech - Stem Cells | Industry - Healthcare | Industry - Pharmaceutical/Biotech | Quadrant - Technological | Theme - 'The Biotech Century'

Human Embryonic Stem Cells: An Introduction to the Science and Therapeutic Potential
Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc.

Amazon Price: $39.95





Stem Cells and Cloning
Benjamin Cummings

Amazon Price: $7.50





Stem Cells and The Future Of Regenerative Medicine
National Academy Press

Amazon Price: $19.95





The Human Embryonic Stem Cell Debate: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy (Basic Bioethics)
The MIT Press

Amazon Price: $15.75







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