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ستاد فرهنگسازی اقتصاد دانش بنیان New stem cell model to study how cancer arises

New stem cell model to study how cancer arises

In an interdisciplinary study combining stem cell biology and tumor biology, researchers from Karolinska Institutet (as well as Uppsala and Lund University, together with researchers in Canada, Germany and France), have succeeded in creating a new type of stem cell model for studies on cancer of the brain. The study was recently published in PNAS.

ستاد فرهنگسازی اقتصاد دانش بنیان Cell infusions benefit heart patients

Cell infusions benefit heart patients

More than three years after a clinical trial was prematurely ended for failing to show progress in healing heart attack scars, a prominent peer-reviewed journal is publishing some surprising results showing that the heart cell treatment does benefit patients.

ستاد فرهنگسازی اقتصاد دانش بنیان New 3-D-printed artery can monitor blockages from the inside

New 3-D-printed artery can monitor blockages from the inside

When surgeons replace part of a blood vessel—something they do in 450,000 patients per year in the United States to treat blood clots, coronary disease, stroke damage and more—the grafted vessel is monitored by CT scans, ultrasounds and other expensive imaging techniques. Despite all that effort, between 40% and 50% of those grafts fail.

ستاد فرهنگسازی اقتصاد دانش بنیان Epigenetics key to daily production of 10 billion blood cells without mistakes

Epigenetics key to daily production of 10 billion blood cells without mistakes

Just one in 2,000 bone marrow cells are hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), but these are the source of the ten billion blood cells humans make every day. In a new study published today, researchers from the Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG), in Barcelona, show that the epigenetic regulator Phf19 is essential for HSC differentiation, and in its absence blood tissue is imbalanced and equivalent to what naturally occurs with aging.

ستاد فرهنگسازی اقتصاد دانش بنیان Animal study shows human brain cells repair damage in multiple sclerosis

Animal study shows human brain cells repair damage in multiple sclerosis

A new study shows that when specific human brain cells are transplanted into animal models of multiple sclerosis and other white matter diseases, the cells repair damage and restore function. The study provides one of the final pieces of scientific evidence necessary to advance this treatment strategy to clinical trials.

//isti.ir/XWGe