Monday, January 2, 2017

Synthetic Stem Cells

Stem cell therapies have the potential to treat many different diseases and help many people. One way these therapies work is by helping damaged tissue repair itself. Still, there are risks associated with these therapies including immune system rejection, and potentially cancerous growths. Additionally, natural stem cells are fragile, and must be treated with extreme care, which slows therapies and adds another element of risk. To circumvent some of these limitations, scientists are developing procedures that use synthetic stem cells, instead of natural cells.

Scientists from North Carolina State University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, created synthetic cardiac stem cells, and implanted them into mouse hearts that had been damaged by heart attack. Usually, the damage that heart attacks inflict upon heart muscles are never repaired by the body. Yet, when the researchers injected the synthetic stem cells, they found that the previously damaged heart muscles were effectively repaired, and this repair was comparable to when natural cardiac stem cells are implanted.

These findings are very promising for the future of stem cell research and therapies. Compared to natural stem cells, the synthetic stem cells are more stable and can be modified for use in different parts of the body. Unlike natural cells, the synthetic versions are incapable of replicating, which reduces the risk of tumor formation. And since the synthetic stem cells are designed to bypass the patient's immune system, they are far less likely to be rejected by the body's immune system. Ultimately, using synthetic stem cells instead of natural stem cells may be more affordable and accessible, and could eliminate some of the dangerous side effects associated with stem cell therapies.

To read more about the research done here, check out the following links:

http://wallstreetpit.com/112614-worlds-first-synthetic-stem-cells-implanted/

https://news.ncsu.edu/2016/12/synthetic-stem-cells/


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