Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute scientists and their collaborators at the University of Cambridge have created a new technique that simplifies the production of human brain and muscle cells — allowing millions of functional cells to be generated in just a few days. The results published today (23 March) in Stem Cell Reports open the door to producing a diversity of new cell types that could not be made before in order to study disease.
Human pluripotent stem cells offer the ability to create any tissue, including those which are typically hard to access, such as brain cells. They hold huge potential for studying human development and the impact of diseases, including cancer, Alzheimer’s, Multiple Sclerosis, and heart disease.
In a human, it takes 9–12 months for a single brain cell to develop fully. To create human brain cells, including grey matter (neurons) and white matter (oligodendrocytes) from an induced pluripotent stem cell, it can take between three and twenty weeks using current methods. However, these methods are complex and
The new platform technology,
To produce the neurons, oligodendrocytes, and muscle cells, scientists altered the DNA in the stem cells. By switching on carefully selected genes, the team «reprogrammed» the stem cells and created a large and nearly pure population of identical cells. The ability to produce as many cells as desired combined with the speed of the development gives an advantage over other methods. The new method opens the door to drug discovery, and potentially therapeutic applications in which large amounts of cells are needed.
«What is really exciting is we only needed to change a few ingredients — transcription factors — to produce the exact cells we wanted in less than a week. We
Dr Ludovic Vallier, an author of the study, from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and Wellcome Trust — Medical Research Council Cambridge Stem Cell Instituteover-expressed factors that make stem cells directly convert into the desired cells, thereby bypassing development and shortening the process to just a few days.»
«When we receive a wealth of new information on the discovery of new cells from large scale projects, like the Human Cell Atlas, it means we’ll be able to apply this method to produce any cell type in the body, but in a dish.»
Daniel Ortmann, joint first author of the study, from the University of Cambridge
Source: http://www.sanger.ac.uk/news/view/new-stem-cell-method-produces-millions-human-brain-and-muscle-cell...«Neurons produced in this study are already being used to understand brain development and function. This method opens the doors to producing all sorts of
Mark Kotter, lead author and Clinician from the University of Cambridgehard-to-access cells and tissues so we can better our understanding of diseases and the response of these tissues to newly developed therapeutics.»