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Thought Provoking Quotes

“[For stem cell research], China is the sleeping giant.”
-Fred Gage - Salk Institute
Researchers Make Stem Cell Breakthrough PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 23 January 2007

Source: hankooki    

By Kim Tae-gyu

A team of South Korean scientists has grown pancreatic beta cells, which can help treat diabetes, from stem cells taken from the umbilical cord blood of new born babies.

The team, headed by Prof. Kang Kyung-sun of Seoul National University, Tuesday announced they haddifferentiated stem cells from cord blood cells into ones that secrete insulin.

The exploit will be featured by the Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, the U.S.-based weekly that documents breakthrough papers in biotechnology.

"We converted cord blood stem cells into pancreatic beta cells, which creates insulin, a substance that when it is missing can cause diabetes," Kang said.
"This is arguably the first tangible advance in the study of the cord blood stem cells, with which so many scientists compete to make progress," the 43-year-old professor said.

Umbilical cord blood is a small volume of blood retrieved from after the delivery of a baby.

Late last October, the BBC reported researchers at the University of Newcastle had grown coin-sized livertissue from cord blood stem cells.

However, the Newcastle scientists have yet to author a paper on their work and this prompted experts to be cautious in evaluating the potential of cord blood stem cells.

By comparison, Kang and his team wrote an article on their feat and also applied for patents on the differentiation technology.

"The number of diabetes patients amounts to roughly 5 million in Korea alone," Kang said.

"We hope cord blood stem cell-related advances will help them. It will enable patients to grapple withdiabetes without causing ethical debates unlike that on embryonic stem cells," he said.

Experiments with embryonic stem cells have constantly generated ethical controversies as they involvehuman embryos, which some regard as living beings.
 
But Kang said cord blood stem cells will not cause controversy as they are extracted from the umbilical cord, which is usually discarded after the birth of a baby.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 06 March 2007 )
 
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