Stem cell researchers hopeful, cautious over 'giant step foward'
POSTED: 11:17 a.m. EST, January 8, 2007
(AP) -- Stem cell researchers reacted with enthusiasm and reservations to a report that scientists have found stem cells in amniotic fluid, a discovery that would allow them to sidestep the controversy over destroying embryos for research.
Researchers at Wake Forest University and Harvard University reported Sunday that the stem cells they drew from amniotic fluid donated by pregnant women hold much the same promise as embryonic stem cells.
They reported they were able to extract the stem cells from the fluid, which cushions babies in the womb, without harm to mother or fetus and turn their discovery into several different tissue cell types, including brain, liver and bone.
But Dr. Anthony Atala, head of Wake Forest's regenerative medicine institute and the senior researcher on the project, said the scientists still don't know exactly how many different cell types can be made from the stem cells found in amniotic fluid. The scientists said preliminary tests in patients are years away.
'Giant step forward'
The cells from amniotic fluid "can clearly generate a broad range of important cell types, but they may not do as many tricks as embryonic stem cells," said Dr. Robert Lanza, chief scientist at the stem cell company Advanced Cell Technology. "Either way, I think this work represents a giant step forward for stem cell research."
Dr. George Daley, a Harvard University stem cell researcher, said the finding raises the possibility that someday expectant parents can freeze amnio-stem cells for future tissue replacement in a sick child without fear of immune rejection.
Nonetheless, Daley said, the discovery shouldn't be used as a replacement for human embryonic stem cell research.
"While they are fascinating subjects of study in their own right, they are not a substitute for human embryonic stem cells, which allow scientists to address a host of other interesting questions in early human development," said Daley, who began work last year to clone human embryos to produce stem cells.
Atala said the research reported in the scientific journal Nature Biotechnology expands far beyond similar work.
At a heart research conference in November, Swiss researcher Simon Hoerstrup said he managed to turn amniotic fluid stem cells into heart cells that could be grown into replacement valves. Hoerstrup has yet to publish his work in a scientific journal.
"Our hope is that these cells will provide a valuable resource for tissue repair and for engineered organs as well," Atala said.
It took Atala's team some seven years of research to determine the cells they found were truly stem cells that "can be used to produce a broad range of cells that may be valuable for therapy."
Atala said the new research has found even more promising stem cells with the potential to turn into many more medically useful replacement parts.
"We have other cell lines cooking," Atala said.
The hallmark of human embryonic stem cells, which are created in the first days after conception, is the ability to turn into any of the more than 220 cell types that make up the human body. Researchers are hopeful they can train these primordial cells to repair damaged organs in need of healthy cells.
However, many people, including President Bush, oppose the destruction of embryos for any reason. The Bush administration has restricted federal funding for the embryo work since 2001, leading many scientists to search for alternative stem cell sources.
The advance is the latest in the so-called regenerative medicine field that has sprung from Atala's lab in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
In April, Atala and his colleagues rebuilt bladders for seven young patients using live tissue grown in the lab.
In the latest work, Atala's team extracted a small number of stem cells swimming among the many other cell types in the amniotic fluid.
One of the more promising aspects of the research is that some of the DNA of the amnio stem cells contained Y chromosomes, which means the cells came from the babies rather than the pregnant moms.
Stem cells discovered in amniotic fluid
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Stem cells discovered in amniotic fluid
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- TithonusSyndrome
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Not really. The Pro-life/Stem cell controversy extends only to stem cells obtained from an embryo that results in said embryo's termination.TithonusSyndrome wrote:Stem cells iz babies iz souls iz damnation, and that's all there is to it as far as they're concerned.
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You mean stem cells harvested using methods like this one that came out last August?Magus wrote:Not really. The Pro-life/Stem cell controversy extends only to stem cells obtained from an embryo that results in said embryo's termination.TithonusSyndrome wrote:Stem cells iz babies iz souls iz damnation, and that's all there is to it as far as they're concerned.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/23/scien ... yt&emc=rss
I seem to remember the Vatican, among others, rejecting it because of the reasoning I mentioned earlier.
TithonusSyndrome wrote: You mean stem cells harvested using methods like this one that came out last August?
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/23/scien ... yt&emc=rss
I seem to remember the Vatican, among others, rejecting it because of the reasoning I mentioned earlier.
Well, according to your article, they seem to be opposed to the things quoted.But critics of human embryonic stem cell research raised other objections, citing the possible risk to the embryo from using the technique, and the fact that it depends on in-vitro fertilization, the generation of embryos outside the womb from a couple’s egg and sperm.
I find this confusing, because the OP didn't mention in-vitro fertilization or fetus risk. Unless I'm missing something?
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As for the particular bishops quoted, I'm wondering what they're smoking. Slippery slope fallacies left and right. Any word on the official Vatican position?
As for the particular bishops quoted, I'm wondering what they're smoking. Slippery slope fallacies left and right. Any word on the official Vatican position?
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If stem cells have always been present in amniotic fluid, then every time a woman gives birth to one child, she 'murders' several others by spilling them on the floor. Clearly, we must outlaw pregnancy.TithonusSyndrome wrote:How would this be any more religiously acceptable a "sidestep" than the method that made news last summer? Stem cells iz babies iz souls iz damnation, and that's all there is to it as far as they're concerned.
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WIN. You sir have the most logical progression of this idea I have ever seen. I heartily endorse this, and second it. If Stem Cells are human beings, then Pregnancy is Murder.Winston Blake wrote:If stem cells have always been present in amniotic fluid, then every time a woman gives birth to one child, she 'murders' several others by spilling them on the floor. Clearly, we must outlaw pregnancy.TithonusSyndrome wrote:How would this be any more religiously acceptable a "sidestep" than the method that made news last summer? Stem cells iz babies iz souls iz damnation, and that's all there is to it as far as they're concerned.
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I kind of wonder how the religions really feel about using stem cells at ALL in treating human ills. From what I understand, practically all of the judeo-christian sects subscribe to the generalized notion that illness is sin lying at your doorstep. So how do they reconcile healing illnesses of a chronic nature? This would seem to be in direct opposition to "God's will".
This is the problem when dealing with these kind of idiotic notions. Their basic belief is incompatible with scientific advancement at its heart since medical research is countering what they see as divine approval. In my mind, I see a huge obstacle to enlightened thinking here since you have to accept illnesses as "errors" that need to be corrected in the first place, and anyone believing that God DESIGNED someone to be born or develop said disorder, is essentially claiming that they deserve it!
Does anyone else think this basic tenet of belief is at the heart of the matter? I'll bet the most vociferous opponents of stem-cell research is secretly condemning these people for their sickness.
This is the problem when dealing with these kind of idiotic notions. Their basic belief is incompatible with scientific advancement at its heart since medical research is countering what they see as divine approval. In my mind, I see a huge obstacle to enlightened thinking here since you have to accept illnesses as "errors" that need to be corrected in the first place, and anyone believing that God DESIGNED someone to be born or develop said disorder, is essentially claiming that they deserve it!
Does anyone else think this basic tenet of belief is at the heart of the matter? I'll bet the most vociferous opponents of stem-cell research is secretly condemning these people for their sickness.
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