Showing posts with label Biotechnology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biotechnology. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

EMBRIONC STEM CELLS

English: Diagram to show how embryonic stem ce...
Image via Wikipedia

Embryonic Stem Cells

1. Stages of development generating embryonic stem cells.
Stem cells, are derived from embryos. Most embryonic stem cells are derived from embryos that develop from eggs that have been fertilized in vitro fertilization clinic and then donated for research purposes with informed consent of the donors. They are not derived from eggs fertilized in a woman's body.

2.Growing Embryonic Stem Cells

Growing cells in the laboratory is known as cell culture. Human embryonic stem cells  are generated by transferring cells from a embryo into a plastic laboratory culture dish that contains a nutrient broth known as culture medium. The cells divide and spread over the surface of the dish. The inner surface of the culture dish is typically coated with mouse embryonic skin cells that have been treated so they will not divide. This coating layer of cells is called a feeder layer. The mouse cells in the bottom of the culture dish provide the cells a sticky surface to which they can attach. Feeder cells release nutrients into the culture medium. Researchers have devised ways to grow embryonic stem cells without mouse feeder cells. This is a significant scientific advance because of the risk that viruses or other macromolecules in the mouse cells may be transmitted to the human cells.

The process of generating an embryonic stem cell line is somewhat inefficient, so lines are not produced each time cells from the  embryo are placed into a culture dish. However, if the plated cells survive, divide and multiply enough to crowd the dish, they are removed gently and plated into several fresh culture dishes. The process of re-plating  the cells is repeated many times and for many months. Each cycle of  the cells is referred to as a passage. Once the cell line is established, the original cells yield millions of embryonic stem cells. Embryonic stem cells that have proliferated in cell culture for for a prolonged period of time without differentiating,  have not developed genetic abnormalities are referred to as an embryonic stem cell line. At any stage in the process, batches of cells can be frozen and shipped to other laboratories for further culture and experimentation.

3. Embryonic Stem Cells Tests
At various points during the process of generating embryonic stem cell lines, scientists test the cells to see whether they exhibit the fundamental properties that make them embryonic stem cells. This process is called characterization.

Scientists who study human embryonic stem cells have not yet agreed on a standard battery of tests that measure the cells' fundamental properties. However, laboratories that grow human embryonic stem cell lines use several kinds of tests, including:

    Growing and sub culturing the stem cells for many months. This ensures that the cells are capable of long-term growth and self-renewal. Scientists inspect the cultures through a microscope to see that the cells look healthy and remain undifferentiated.
    Using specific techniques to determine the presence of transcription factors that are typically produced by undifferentiated cells. Two of the most important transcription factors are Nanog and Oct4. Transcription factors help turn genes on and off at the right time, which is an important part of the processes of cell differentiation and embryonic development. In this case, both Oct 4 and Nanog are associated with maintaining the stem cells in an undifferentiated state, capable of self-renewal.
    Using specific techniques to determine the presence of paricular cell surface markers that are typically produced by undifferentiated cells.
    Examining the chromosomes under a microscope. This is a method to assess whether the chromosomes are damaged or if the number of chromosomes has changed. It does not detect genetic mutations in the cells.
    Determining whether the cells can be re-grown, or subcultures, after freezing, thawing, and re-plating.
A colony of embryonic stem cells, from the H9 ...
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 4. Human Embryonic Stem Cells
1) allowing the cells to differentiate spontaneously in cell culture
2) manipulating the cells so they will differentiate to form cells characteristic of the three germ layers; or
 3) injecting the cells into a mouse with a suppressed immune system to test for the formation of a benign tumor called a teratoma. Since the mouse’s immune system is suppressed, the injected human stem cells are not rejected by the mouse immune system and scientists can observe growth and differentiation of the human stem cells. Teratomas typically contain a mixture of many differentiated or partly differentiated cell types—an indication that the embryonic stem cells are capable of differentiating into multiple cell types.
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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

STEM CELLS THE MAGIC POWER OF YOU

 DEEPAK CHOPRA EXPLAINS STEM CELLS
World Famous Doctor Deepak Chopra explanation about the magic power of you, how you are integrated into the cosmic universe and your stem cells. Incredibly simple concept of how to unlock the information and intelligent that is deep within your every stem cell at the molecular level. Stem cells will change your life some day and that day is today!

Deepak Chopra at MSPAC event
Image by tobin.t via Flickr

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Friday, November 4, 2011

STEM CELLS. WHY ARE THEY IMPORTANT

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Mouse embryonic stem cells with fluorescent markerImage via WikipediaWHY ARE STEM CELLS IMPORTANT



STEM CELLS have the remarkable potential to develop into many different cell types in the body during early life and growth. In addition, in many tissues they serve as a sort of internal repair system, dividing essentially without limit to replenish other cells as long as the person or animal is still alive. When a stem cell divides, each new cell has the potential either to remain a stem cell or become another type of cell with a more specialized function, such as a muscle cell, a red blood cell, or a brain cell.

Stem cells are distinguished from other cell types by two important characteristics. First, they are specialized cells capable of renewing themselves through cell division, sometimes after long periods of inactivity. Second, under certain physiologic or experimental conditions, they can be induced to become tissue- or organ-specific cells with special functions. In some organs, such as the gut and bone marrow, stem cells regularly divide to repair and replace worn out or damaged tissues. In other organs, however, such as the pancreas and the heart, stem cells only divide under special conditions.

Until recently, scientists primarily worked with two kinds of stem cells from animals and humans: embryonic stem cells and non-embryonic "somatic" or "adult" stem cells. The functions and characteristics of these cells will be explained in this document. Scientists discovered ways to derive embryonic stem cells from early mouse embryos nearly 30 years ago, in 1981. The detailed study of the biology of mouse stem cells led to the discovery, in 1998, of a method to derive stem cells from human embryos and grow the cells in the laboratory. These cells are called human embryonic stem cells. The embryos used in these studies were created for reproductive purposes through in vitro fertilization procedures. When they were no longer needed for that purpose, they were donated for research with the informed consent of the donor. In 2006, researchers made another breakthrough by identifying conditions that would allow some specialized adult cells to be "reprogrammed" genetically to assume a stem cell-like state. This new type of stem cell, called induced plenipotentiary stem cells  , will be discussed in a later section of this document.

Stem cells are important for living organisms for many reasons. In the 3- to 5-day-old embryo, called a blastocyst, the inner cells give rise to the entire body of the organism, including all of the many specialized cell types and organs such as the heart, lung, skin, sperm, eggs and other tissues. In some adult tissues, such as bone marrow, muscle, and brain, discrete populations of adult stem cells generate replacements for cells that are lost through normal wear and tear, injury, or disease.

Given their unique regenerative abilities, stem cells offer new potentials for treating diseases such as diabetes, and heart disease. However, much work remains to be done in the laboratory and the clinic to understand how to use these cells for cell-based therapies to treat disease, which is also referred to as regenerative or reparation medicine.

Laboratory studies of stem cells enable scientists to learn about the cells’ essential properties and what makes them different from specialized cell types. Scientists are already using stem cells in the laboratory to screen new drugs and to develop model systems to study normal growth and identify the causes of birth defects.

Research on stem cells continues to advance knowledge about how an organism develops from a single cell and how healthy cells replace damaged cells in adult organisms. Stem cell research is one of the most fascinating areas of contemporary biology, but, as with many expanding fields of scientific inquiry, research on stem cells raises scientific questions as rapidly as it generates new discoveries.

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Saturday, October 15, 2011

European Stem Cell Trails Successful

organ regeneration example from induced plurip...Image via Wikipedia
Europe Treats Stem Cells



A new medical process designed to stop the damage caused by a degenerative eye disease is to be tested in Europe's first clinical trial using embryonic stem cells.

If it proves to be successful, the treatment will open up a wide range of possible treatments for eye diseases and would be a huge boost for medicine because stem cells are thought to hold the key to tackling many types of disease.
Twelve volunteer patients suffering from Stargardt's macular dystrophy, which is know as incurable and happens in childhood, will have stem cells injected directly into their eyes to test the validity of the procedure.

Embryonic stem cells are know as "master cells" which have the potential to develop into

many different types of stem cells.
The trial is being held by Moorfields Eye Hospital and will be led by Professor James Bainbridge, who said: "This is the first time embryonic stem cells have been used here. They have great potential to be able to regenerate a variety of different tissues and organs. It's very exciting now to be at the stage where we can begin to explore that potential."
If they are as successful as researchers hope they will be, a treatment based on the trials may be available in five to 10 years

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Stem Cells China


Stem Cells In China

When it comes to stem cells, China is showing that it can perform a world-class science. It is a shame that fraud happens and that the people in power turns a blind eye

 Illustration by David Simonds
IN THE West, and particularly in the United states, the phrase “stem cell” has a faile bad reputation. Stem cells are associated, in the minds of many, with the killing of human embryos, the cloning of humans and the Frankenstein-like creation of human body parts. Add in the strange case of Hwang Woo-suk, a South Korean researcher who announced, to great acclaim, that he had success in cloning human embryos and was then exposed as a fraud, and you have an area in which many researchers understandably fear to tread.
But not Chinese researchers. A rejection of the idea that embryos are in any meaningful sense human beings, together with the possibility of stealing a march on the diffident West, has caused a lot of research into stem cells in China. And not only research. Chinese clinics have moved onto offering therapies. Patients from around the world fly in for the treatment of conditions ranging from autism to spinal-cord injury.
A stem cell is one that, when it divides, has the potential to generate specialised cell types through one daughter line while the other daughter retains the property of “stemness”. Some stem cells, known as pluripotent cells, can generate several different cell types. The pluripotent cells found in embryos, for example, can turn into any one of the 220 or so cell types of which a human body is formed.
A potent mix
Many hospitals are making a profit from unproven therapies, but many proper clinical trials are also being conducted using stem cells, for conditions like heart-muscle damage, ischemia of the limbs, liver disease and neurological disorders. These include a multi-centre trial organised by the China Spinal Cord Injury Network, a consortium of over two dozen centres in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, to test whether a combination of lithium and transplants of stem cells from umbilical-cord blood could lead to improvements in patients with spinal-cord injury.
Moreover, last year researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, in Beijing, and Shanghai Jiao Tong University dispelled some of the voodoo surrounding stem cells by producing fertile mice from inducible pluripotent cells. An inducible pluripotent cell is one derived from a body cell (skin, for example) that has been made pluripotent by chemical treatment, rather than having been extracted from an embryo. Besides saving embryos, that means (if the same trick can be repeated in humans) that replacement organs might be grown from a patient’s own tissues.
This is all very encouraging. China’s health ministry has, however, turned a blind eye to the unauthorised stem-cell therapies under its juristrict. 
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