First step towards banking disease-specific pluripotent stem cells
September 30, 2008 by Aaron Cheung
Scientists at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute have recently reported in the scientific journal Cell that they have been able to create stem cells from patients with a wide variety of genetic diseases.
The group, led by Dr. George Daley, achieved this task by taking fibroblasts from the skin or bone marrow of patients with genetic diseases and subsequently infecting these cells with a cocktail of viruses. This caused the cells to back to a state that is similar to pluripotent stem cells (i.e. embryonic stem cells).
These disease-specific cells are of great value as they give researcher more information about the nature of the genetic mutation (and hence the disease) that is carried in these stem cells. Not only will these disease-specific cells help scientists understand what role these cells play in the development of disease, but the information carried in these cells will aid in drug development.
Diseases included in this discovery are adenosine deaminase deficiency-related severe combined immunodeficiency , Shwachman-Bodian-Diamond syndrome, Gaucher diseaseI, Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy, Parkinson’s disease , Huntington’s disease, type 1diabetes, Down syndrome, and the carrier state of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome.
As controversy over the use of embryonic stem cells in research continues, this discovery helps bypass some of the ethical issues involve as these stem cells can generated by acquiring a fibroblast from patients rather than from an embryo.
Aaron Cheung is a graduate student in the lab of Dr. James Ellis at SickKids.
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