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New Scientist on MSNDo we grow new brain cells as adults? The answer seems to be yesScientists have found evidence of new brain cells sprouting in adults - a process that many thought only occurred in children ...
Hematopoietic progenitor cells are categorized based upon their cell potency, or their differentiation potential. As blood cells develop, their potency decreases. First, hematopoietic stem cells ...
Differentiation of stem cells to hepatocytes has industrial applications, as well as the potential to develop new therapeutic strategies for liver disease. The protocol described here ...
Evidence That Adults Stem Cells Differentiate Like Embryonic Stem Cells Published In Nature Date: June 24, 2002 ... M.D., and her colleagues call these cells multipotent adult progenitor cells ...
One of the most high profile -- and controversial -- papers in the adult stem cell field has been called into further question this month after a university investigation raised concerns about the ...
That changed in 2002, when New Scientist revealed that Catherine Verfaillie of the University of Minnesota had discovered “multipotent adult progenitor cells”, or MAPCs, apparently capable of ...
'Progenitor cell' discovery enters U.S. cloning debate / These adult stem cells may be as useful as those from embryos By Tom Abate , Chronicle Staff Writer June 21, 2002 ...
University of Minnesota researchers show that adult bone marrow stem cells can be induced to differentiate into cells of the midbrain. The findings, published in the online early edition of the ...
Multipotent adult progenitor cells (MAPC) are a unique population of adult stem cells that can be isolated from the marrow of multiple mammalian species, including human, rat, and mouse.
After infections or blood loss, the body must compensate for the loss of blood cells as quickly as possible. This has long been considered the task of the hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow.
Kratchmarov, R., et al. (2024). TCF1–LEF1 co-expression identifies a multipotent progenitor cell (TH2-MPP) across human allergic diseases. Nature Immunology.
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