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Archive by date: October 2007

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My sister, the stem-cell line

A front-page story in the San Francisco Chronicle describes a new service parents can opt for when getting in vitro fertilization services. Instead of storing, donating, or discarding unimplanted embryos, would-be parents can pay to have these embryos used to make stem cell lines.
This would create stem cell lines that would be the genetic siblings to any of a couple’s children.

The company offering this service, StemLifeLine, says over a dozen families have participated as subjects or paying customers.

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Stem cell student bloggers

I wanted to give a quick shout-out to some students today.

William Gunn, at Tulane gives his take on a raft of stem cell papers on his blog, Synthesis.

Raja Anand, in Belgium, has put together an impressive collection of links.

And of course, the frighteningly energetic Attila, whom I've had the pleasure of meeting in person blogs on PIMM.

Now, Red Pill, Chris Scott, California Stem Cell Report, you're all great, but there's a certain energy to students, getting started in a field and sharing what they're learning.

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Nobel prize recipient needed embryonic stem cells to make knockout mice

The Nobel prize has been awarded to three scientists who created the techniques for “knockout mice”. Here’s one article.

The award announcement acknowledged the powerful cells that made the technique possible. The prize went to Sir Martin Evans at Cardiff University, Oliver Smithies, from the University of North Carolina, and Mario Capecchi, from the University of Utah for "principles for introducing specific gene modifications in mice by the use of embryonic stem cells".

Knockout (and knock-in) mice are one of genetics’ power apps. Scientists create mice with nonfunctioning (or, in some cases, differently functioning) versions of specific genes. In one recent example, scientists knocked out one of many mouse genes that allow neurons to communicate and ended up, surprisingly, with a potential animal model for obsessive compulsive disorder. That’s just one of thousands of experiments using these engineered mice. The technique and its iterations are so routine that it’s hard to imagine biology without it.

Knockout mice are, both directly and indirectly, responsible for the breakthroughs showing that mouse skin cells can be reprogrammed to a state almost exactly like embryonic stem cells. Also, Shinya Yamanaka, the scientist who discovered which genes to insert to cause reprogramming, read about knockout mice well over a decade ago. He was doing classic pharmacology on dogs, but decided to strike out on a completely different path because the ability to pick any gene and delete its function was so intriguing.

When Yamanka attempted to reprogram differentiated cells, he started by genetically modifying mice so that their cells could signal (by growing green) when they had been reprogrammed.

This year’s Nobel Prize in Medicine lauds a tool and technique used by scientists in many disciplines across the world. It also illustrates a powerful platform that already owes its existence to embryonic stem cells. Cell therapies aside, many scientists who hope to study a disease in a dish believe there are more to come.