Stem Cell Research News ($)
Stem Cell Business News ($)
The Stem Cell Trekker
Subscription Page
It's  

 

 

NEW! 2012 Guide to Stem Cell Research Companies

Complete listing of global companies performing stem cell research... PLUS stem cell research suppliers AND for-profit cord blood banks! 214 companies in all ... Soon  available in a paperback edition.

Click for more information
Stem Cell Lab World

For qualified stem cell scientists and lab administrators...

Click for more information
How can I access archived ($) content? 

Start a subscription to Stem Cell Research News at the low individual annual rate to access ALL archived content on this Web site. All articles are posted for free access for seven days. Afterward, articles are archived and require a subscription. 

Click for more information

 
Researchers Develop Safer Way To Make Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells - ($)
Saturday, February 05, 2011 - Stem Cell Research News
ChengLinzhao.jpg
 Linzhao Cheng
 

Researchers report that they have found a better way to create induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from a small blood sample that avoids creating DNA changes that could lead to tumor formation.

“These iPS cells are much safer than ones made with previous technologies because they don’t involve integrating foreign viruses that can potentially lead to uncontrolled, cancerous cell growth,” said Linzhao Cheng, Ph.D., an associate professor of medicine in the Division of Hematology and a member of the Johns Hopkins Institute of Cell Engineering. “This is important if iPS cells are to be used as therapies one day.”

Cheng said the higher-quality iPS cells will also be more reliable in research studies, “since we don’t have to worry about extra genetic changes associated with previous technologies interfering with study results.”

Johns Hopkins researchers created the safer iPS cells by transferring a circular piece of DNA into blood cells from anonymous donors to deliver the needed genetic components. The traditional way is to use viruses to carry DNA into a cell’s genome. Unlike the viral methods, the circular DNA the Hopkins team used is designed to stay separate from the host cell’s genome. After the iPS cells formed, the circular DNA delivered into the blood cells was gradually lost.

Using about a tablespoon of human adult blood or umbilical cord blood, the researchers grew the blood cells in the lab for eight to nine days. The researchers then transferred the circular DNA into the blood cells, where the introduced genes turned on to convert the blood cells to iPS cells within 14 days.

The research group verified conversion from mature blood cells to iPS cells by testing their ability to behave like stem cells and differentiate into other cell types, such as bone, muscle or neural cells. They also looked at the DNA from a dozen iPS cell lines to make sure there were no DNA rearrangements.

Cheng said the new method is also more efficient than the traditional use of skin cells to make iPS cells.

“After a skin biopsy, it takes a full month to grow the skin cells before they are ready to be reprogrammed into iPS cells, unlike the blood cells that only need to grow for eight or nine days,” said Cheng. “The time it takes to reprogram the iPS cells from blood cells is also shortened to two weeks, compared to the month it takes when using skin cells.”

Cheng said “this easy method of generating integration-free human iPS cells from blood cells will accelerate their use in both research and future clinical applications.”

This study was published in Cell Research.

Citation: “Efficient human iPS cell derivation by a non-integrating plasmid from blood cells with unique epigenetic and gene expression signatures;” Bin-Kuan Chou, et al.; Cell Research. 18 January 2011, online ahead of print, DOI: 10.1038/cr.2011.12.

Abstract: Click here.

Contact: Linzhao Cheng, 410-614-6958, lcheng@welch.jhu.edu

Contact: http://www.stemcelllab.org

Contact: http://www.hopkins-ice.org/index.html


Scroll down to see related articles below. 
 


Follow StemCellMonitor on Twitter

Bookmark and Share


Related Articles :

E-mail this stem cell article to a friend - Print this stem cell article
Articles can be e-mailed to a friend or you can get a printable version of the article.

 
Search Stem Cell Articles :
Enter key word(s)

For Email Newsletters you can trust

 
 
 

 



 
 



 

Copyright © 2003 -  2013 by DataTrends Publications, Inc. All rights reserved.