Liver function regenerated and survival extended in mice with hepatic failure using human stem cell-derived hepatocytes
Jul 30th, 2013 · Comments Off
Main Category: Liver Disease / Hepatitis
Also Included In: Stem Cell Research
Article Date: 30 Jul 2013 – 0:00 PDT
Liebert, Mary Ann. “Liver function regenerated and survival extended in mice with hepatic failure using human stem cell-derived hepatocytes.” Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 30 Jul. 2013. Web.
30 Jul. 2013. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/264044.php>
Massoud Vosough and coauthors demonstrate a large-scale, integrated manufacturing strategy for generating functional hepatocytes in a single suspension culture grown in a scalable stirred bioreactor. In the article “Generation of Functional Hepatocyte-Like Cells from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells in a Scalable Suspension Culture” the authors describe the method used for scale-up, differentiation of the pluripotent stem cells into liver cells, and characterization and purification of the hepatocytes based on their physiological properties and the expression of liver cell biomarkers.
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Liver function regenerated and survival extended in mice with hepatic failure using human stem cell-derived hepatocytes
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David C. Hay, MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine, University of Edinburgh, U.K., comments on the importance of Vosough et al.’s contribution to the scientific literature in his editorial in Stem Cells and Development entitled “Rapid and Scalable Human Stem Cell Differentiation: Now in 3D.” The researchers “developed a system for mass manufacture of stem cell derived hepatocytes in numbers that would be useful for clinical application,” creating possibilities for future “immune matched cell based therapies,” says Hay. Such approaches could be used to correct mutated genes in stem cell populations prior to differentiation and transplantation, he adds.
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