Embryonic stem cells made without embryos

Wed Nov 21, 2007 8:12am EST
 
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By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers have transformed ordinary human skin cells into batches of cells that look and act like embryonic stem cells -- but without using cloning technology and without making embryos.

Their breakthroughs, reported on Tuesday, could make possible the long-sought goal of tailor-made medicine, but without the political, scientific and ethical roadblock of using human eggs or embryos.

The White House immediately welcomed the development, given President George W. Bush's long opposition to embryo research, even as scientists said the finding should not be the end of such research.

"We weren't avoiding the ethical controversy -- we just thought this was an alternative approach that would work quicker," said James Thomson of the University of Wisconsin in Madison, who led one of the teams.

"This work represents a tremendous scientific milestone -- the biological equivalent of the Wright Brothers' first airplane," said Dr. Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology, a Massachusetts company working in the same field.

"It's not practical to use right now, but it might be in a few years. This is truly the Holy Grail -- to be able to take a few cells from a patient -- say a cheek swab or few skin cells -- and turn them into stem cells in the laboratory."

The researchers agree it will be years before the technique could be used to treat people. More immediately, they say it can be used to study diseases and to screen drugs.

"We have to be sure the cells are safe," Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University in Japan and the University of California San Francisco said in an e-mailed statement.

Yamanaka and colleagues reported their finding in the journal Cell. Thomson and colleagues reported theirs in the journal Science.

The new cells are called induced pluripotent stem cells and look and act much like embryonic stem cells -- the master cells that give rise to every cell and tissue in the body.

FOUR GENES

Both teams used just four genes to transform ordinary skin cells called fibroblasts into induced pluripotent stem cells -- iPS cells for short.

Yamanaka's team got the cells to develop into heart cells, which then beat in unison.

Each method is likely to be patented separately.

Both teams said the new cells are not ready to use in people yet because they used a type of virus called a retrovirus to carry the new genes into the skin cells. It is not clear whether this virus might cause genetic mutations that could cause cancer or other side effects.  Continued...

 
Dr. Qurrath U. Ain of the Elmhurst Pediatric Emergency Center examines a patient with flu-like symptoms at Elmhurst Hospital in New York in this December 12, 2003. file photo. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/Files
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