Drug regulator raids 4 cell therapy makers
The pharmaceutical industry is paying keen attention to why the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety conducted an urgent inspection of four cell therapy developers.
A joint effort to understand cartilage development
Anyone with arthritis can appreciate how useful it would be if scientists could grow cartilage in the lab. To this end, Keck School of Medicine of USC scientists in the USC Stem Cell laboratory of Denis Evseenko, MD, Ph.D., collaborated with colleagues at several institutions to provide new insights into how gene activity drives the development of cartilage. Their findings appear today in Nature Communications.
Regenerative medicine: Cell conversion factors predicted
Thanks to a newly developed computational method, Luxembourg researchers can accurately predict how one subpopulation of cells can be converted into another.
Growing brain cancer in a dish
For the first-time, researchers at IMBA- Institute of Molecular Biotechnology of the Austrian Academy of Sciences – develop organoids, that mimic the onset of brain cancer.
Key Puzzle for Cellular Memory Solved
The cells in our body divide constantly throughout life. But how do cells remember whether to develop into a skin, liver or intestinal cell? Its a question that has puzzled scientists for many years.
Scientists discover neurodegenerative disease in monkeys
OHSU scientists have discovered a naturally occurring disease in monkeys that mimics a deadly childhood neurodegenerative disorder in people—a finding that holds promise for developing new gene therapies to treat Batten disease.
MOLECULE THAT LEADS STEM CELLS TO BONE MARROW DISCOVERED
An ‘antenna’ molecule, which is capable of guiding blood stem cells to their natural ‘home’, the bone marrow, has been discovered. The discovery could improve the efficiency of umbilical cord stem cell transplants.
One-off genetic test could detect heart attack risk
People born at increased risk of heart attack could be identified by a one off-genetic test, a study has found.
3-D liver tissue implants made from human stem cells support liver function in mice
Stem cells transformed into 3-D human liver tissue by scientists from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Centre for Regenerative Medicine at the University of Edinburgh show promising support of liver function when implanted into mice with a liver disease.
Cancer breakthrough as scientists supercharge an immune cell that could be mass-produced to be used in revolutionary new treatment
A type of supercharged immune cell could be mass-produced to fight cancer in cutting-edge immunotherapy treatments, scientists believe.