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Cell breakthrough offers transplant hope

Friday, April 2, 1999 Published at 01:32 GMT 02:32 UK: US scientists say
they have isolated from human bone marrow the parent cells that give rise
to various "mesenchymal" tissues, such as bone, cartilage, fat, and muscle.

It opens the door to new experiments that will improve our understanding of
these important stem cells and their potential for the treatment of damaged
tissues.

Stem cells have been a hot topic since last year, when scientists managed
to cultivate human embryonic stem cells.

Embryonic stem cells are "totipotent;" that is, they can differentiate into
all types of tissue.

Mark Pittenger and colleagues from Osiris Therapeutics report in the
journal Science that they have isolated stem cells that are multipotent;
that is, the cells are capable of differentiating into a more limited
number of specialised roles - in this case, mesenchymal tissues.

Researchers had previously managed to isolate from human bone marrow a
different type of stem cell, one that renews circulating blood elements
such as red and white blood cells.

Now mesenchymal stem cells can be studied with similar ease with the goal
of learning how to control and guide their specialisation in the lab.

Researchers have high hopes for the emerging cell technologies. A
combination of stem cell and cloning techniques may make it possible to
grow from scratch human tissues for use in transplants.

At a cloning conference in London this week, a leading UK embryologist
predicted the technologies would enable scientists to grow life-saving bone
marrow in the lab for children with leukaemia.

Dame Anne McLaren, who advises the UK Government on fertility and cloning
issues, said the treatment could be available within three years.

It would involve extracting the nucleus of a cell taken from a child, and
transferring it to an unfertilised egg which had had its own nucleus removed.

The egg, programmed by the child's DNA inside the nucleus, would then start
to divide and form an embryo. At an early stage, the embryo would be
dismantled to obtain stem cells. These would then be treated with the right
chemical growth factors to trigger their development into bone marrow cells.

And because the original nuclear material came from the child, the new bone
marrow cells would be a perfect match.

Dame Anne was among a group of influential scientists who advised the UK
Government in December to allow such research to be undertaken.

BBC News Online: Sci/Tech
By BBC News Online Science Editor Dr David Whitehouse
http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/sci/tech/newsid_309000/309571.stm
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janet paterson - 52 now /41 dx /37 onset - almonte/ontario/canada
<http://www.newcountry.nu/pd/members/janet/index.htm>
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