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| Stem cell
Monday, June 17, 2013 | 06:38 | 0 Comment(s)
What are Stem Cells?
Stem Cells are crucial to develop organisms. They are non-specialized
cells which have the potential to create other types of specific cells, such as
blood-, brain-, tissue- or muscle-cells (Explorable, 2011).
Stem cells are in all of our body and lives, but are far
more potent in a fetus (also spelled foetus, fœtus, faetus, or fætus) than in
an adult body. Some types of stem cells may be able to create all other cells
in the body. Others have the potential to repair or replace damaged tissue or
cells. Embryonic Stem Cells are developed from a female egg after it is
fertilized by sperm. The process takes 4-5 days (Explorable, 2011).
Below is a video explaining more about stem cells and how it actually work. How do stem cell work? Retrieved from You Tube by BBCWorldWide
Imagine a world where transplants
could be done without the sacrifice of another person losing an organ. This
world exists only within the boundaries of stem cell research. What stem cell
research strives to achieve is the cultivation and nutriment of stem cells, the
basic cell of the body, enabling it to be reproduced to other specific parts of
the body. The implications are obvious. Limbs and organs could be grown from
scratch in a lab then used in transplants or to cure illnesses (Genetic
Engineering, 2010).
Stem cells have the remarkable
potential to develop into many different cell types in the body during early
life and growth. In addition, in many tissues they serve as a sort of internal
repair system, dividing essentially without limit to replenish other cells as
long as the person or animal is still alive. When a stem cell divides, each new
cell has the potential either to remain a stem cell or become another type of
cell with a more specialized function, such as a muscle cell, a red blood cell,
or a brain cell.
Stem cells are distinguished from
other cell types by two important characteristics. First, they are
unspecialized cells capable of renewing themselves through cell division,
sometimes after long periods of inactivity. Second, under certain physiologic
or experimental conditions, they can be induced to become tissue- or organ-specific
cells with special functions. In some organs, such as the gut and bone marrow,
stem cells regularly divide to repair and replace worn out or damaged tissues.
In other organs, however, such as the pancreas and the heart, stem cells only
divide under special conditions.
Until recently, scientists primarily worked with two kinds of stem cells from animals and humans: embryonic stem cells and non-embryonic "somatic" or "adult" stem cells. The functions and characteristics of these cells will be explained in this document. Scientists discovered ways to derive embryonic stem cells from early mouse embryos nearly 30 years ago, in 1981. The detailed study of the biology of mouse stem cells led to the discovery, in 1998, of a method to derive stem cells from human embryos and grow the cells in the laboratory. These cells are called human embryonic stem cells. The embryos used in these studies were created for reproductive purposes through in vitro fertilization procedures. When they were no longer needed for that purpose, they were donated for research with the informed consent of the donor. In 2006, researchers made another breakthrough by identifying conditions that would allow some specialized adult cells to be "reprogrammed" genetically to assume a stem cell-like state. This new type of stem cell, called induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). How Stem Cell Research Benefits Medical Treatments?
Explorable. Stem
Cell Research: Pros and Cons. (2011). Retrieved on 17th June 2013 at
http://explorable.com/stem-cell-pros-and-cons
Genetic Engineering. Stem Cells Pro and Con. (2010). Retrieved on 17th June 2013 at http://bootstrike.com/Genetics/StemCells/proandcon.php
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