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Blood Cells from Skin
By David Prentice
November 8, 2010
Canadian scientists have shown
that they can turn human skin cells into blood cells, without
going through an intermediate stem cell stage. The technique,
called “direct reprogramming,” used only one (Oct 4) of the four
“Yamanaka factors” used previously to reprogram skin cells into
iPS cells (pluripotent stem cells that behave like embryonic
stem cells). Further treatment with specific cytokines induced
various types of blood cells to form. Direct reprogramming from
one cell type to another avoids the problems inherent in
pluripotent stem cells, including the problems of tumor
formation, as well as the ethical problems of embryonic stem
cells.
The study was published online in
Nature. Previous studies have shown success of direct
reprogramming in mice, producing neurons, cardiomyocytes, and
insulin-secreting cells, but the McMaster University team is the
first to show that direct reprogramming can work with human
cells. |