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* Nobel Prize-winning scientist says it could be tougher than first thought
to harness the healing power of stem cells in medicine.*

It had been hoped a single "master" cell could potentially be used to repair
all damage in a single organ.

Professor Mario Capecchi, from the University of Utah, found surprising
clues that different stem cells might be working together in the same organ.


This means experimental treatments relying on the wrong type might fail.

 Professor Capecchi, writing in the Nature Genetics, said the finding
suggested stem cell biology could be "more complicated" than previously
thought, which could be bad news for patients hoping for the swift arrival
of new therapies.

*Cell maker*

Unlike the majority of cells in the body, stem cells have special qualities.


They not only reproduce themselves, but can produce a wide variety of the
cells needed in different parts of the body.

In their most potent form, in the embryo, they have the ability to create
any tissue in the body, but cells with more limited, but still useful,
abilities have been found in the organs of adults.

Some scientists believe that if these "adult stem cells" could be found and
extracted, they could form the basis of treatments, without the controversy
surrounding the use of embryos.

However, Professor Capecchi's work means that identifying the most useful
cells will not necessarily be straightforward.

He developed a new way of tracking the position of adult stem cells in the
intestines of mice.

Unexpectedly, however, he found the cells not spread evenly through the
organ, but clustered mostly in the upper third of the intestine.

*Complex picture*

This means, he said, that other as yet unidentified adult stem cells are
likely to be at work renewing tissues elsewhere in the gut.

Creating therapies using one type might have only a limited effect on the
organ as a whole.

Professor Capecchi said: "People always thought about a uniform stem cell
population in each organ, but now we are saying there are multiple stem cell
populations in a given organ, so if you're going to do therapy, you have to
recognise this complexity.

"It's important because people are talking about stem cell therapy, they
want to stick in stem cells to treat disease."

He said that there was no reason why it should be different in other organs
under investigation.

Professor Robin Lovell-Badge, a stem cell specialist from the Medical
Research Council, said the finding fitted with other evidence suggesting the
presence of different stem cell types.

"This says we actually have two populations of stem cells in the same
organ."

He said: "I can see no reason why this also won't be the case in other parts
of the body, such as the central nervous system.
"It's important that we find out which is the most useful cell in these
organs, if we want to use them in therapies."

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