Could reprogrammed cells fight 'untreatable' diseases?
Jeanne Loring and her Scripps Research Institute colleagues transplanted a set of cells into the spinal cords of mice that had lost use of their hind limbs to multiple sclerosis. As the experimentalists expected, within a week, the mice rejected the cells. But after another week, the mice began to walk.
“We thought that they wouldn’t do anything,” says Loring, who directs the Center for Regenerative Medicine at Scripps. But as her lab has since shown numerous times, and published in Stem Cell Reports, something that these particular so-called “neural precursor cells” do before the immune system kicks them out seems to make the mouse better........ Read More -http://www.ms-uk.org/stemcells
Could reprogrammed cells fight 'untreatable' diseases?
Could reprogrammed cells fight 'untreatable' diseases?
MS-UK - http://www.ms-uk.org/
Re: Could reprogrammed cells fight 'untreatable' diseases?
Interesting. It sorta reminds me of the way homeopathy works.
I'm wondering how Loring's experiment would have worked on elderly mice, to bypass the Notch regulatory pathway.
I'm wondering how Loring's experiment would have worked on elderly mice, to bypass the Notch regulatory pathway.
Reachable via PM. Seems I have Higbee's HSII on ThisIsMS. Frustrated by MSers, FMers, Lymers & Prematurely-Aged-By-EMFers who prefer cryptic jargonian Systems Vs. Intuitive empirical experience. Don't simple truths count for anything anymore?