PDA

View Full Version : This is pretty cool.



Cliff Rohrabacher
02-19-2007, 3:00 PM
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Japanese researchers said on Sunday they had grown normal-looking teeth from single cells in lab dishes, and transplanted them into mice.
They used primitive cells, not quite as early as stem cells, and injected them into a framework of collagen, the material that holds the body together.
After growing them, they found their structures had matured into the components that make teeth, including dentin, enamel, dental pulp, blood vessels, and periodontal ligaments.
They were "arranged appropriately when compared with a natural tooth," the researchers reported in the journal Nature Methods.
The teeth grew and developed normally when transplanted into a mouse, said Takashi Tsuji of the Tokyo University of Science in Chiba, Japan and colleagues.
They said their method was the first to show an entire organ could be replaced using just a few cells.
"To restore the partial loss of organ function, stem cell transplantation therapies have been developed," they wrote.
"The ultimate goal of regenerative therapy, however, is to develop fully functioning bioengineered organs that can replace lost or damaged organs after disease, injury or aging."
The researchers went after the "organ germ" -- the early cells made using partially differentiated cells known as epithelial and mesenchymal cells. In this case the cells were taken from what is known as the tooth germ, the little bud that appears before an animal grows a tooth.
"Our reconstituted tooth germ generates a complete and entirely bioengineered tooth," they wrote.
"This study thus provides the first evidence of a successful reconstitution of an entire organ via the transplantation of bioengineered material," they added.
"Our present findings should also encourage the future development of organ replacement by regenerative therapy."


http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSN1834654020070219?src=021907_1017_ARTICLE_PROM O_also_on_reuters

Chris Padilla
02-22-2007, 2:09 PM
Ah, the wonder of technology...could they grow me a new brain?! ;)

Cliff Rohrabacher
02-23-2007, 9:51 AM
Ah, the wonder of technology...could they grow me a new brain?! ;)

A wonder indeed. What they have done is to solve for the mystery of "contact inhibition." That is the process by whihc any given cell knows what to be. How does a left little toe cell know what is supposed to be instead of growing into a retina cell or a liver cell? Each cell has all the information it needs to be any cell in the body yet they develop as they should. It is a deep mystery of molecular biology and these guys have managed to pull off a seriously good cloning process.

Imagine livers kidneys hearts and even limbs that can be cloned up in a tank and your body won't reject them because they are already you.

Ken Fitzgerald
02-23-2007, 9:59 AM
As inspiring as this is......we've just begun to scrape the surface. It never ceases to amaze me....I've been in the medical business for 30+ years....how far we've come......how far we have to go.......And yet....we've just begun.........Certain forms of cancer if you were diagnosed with 30 years ago....it was a death sentence....today they are cureable......look at the new vaccine for cervical cancer that has been developed and marketed recently. My wife was diagnosed with a rare form some 14 years ago....stage zero....50% survival rate...hers was stage one....as I write this I can hear her moving around upstairs in our home. My hillbilly relatives in the 50's considered a hospital as a place to go to DIE.....We've come a long ways.....we have a lot farther way to go....but this article is indeed inspirational!