However, unspecialized stem cells can give rise to specialized cells, including heart muscle cells, blood cells, or nerve cells.
Stem cells are capable of dividing and renewing themselves for long periods. Unlike muscle cells, blood cells, or nerve cells � which do not normally replicate themselves � stem cells may replicate many times. When cells replicate themselves many times over it is called proliferation. |
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stem cells |
Until recently, it had been thought that a blood-forming cell in the bone marrow � which is called a hematopoietic stem cell � could not give rise to the cells of a very different tissue, such as nerve cells in the brain. | |
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Until recently, it had been thought that a blood-forming cell in the bone marrow � which is called a hematopoietic stem cell � could not give rise to the cells of a very different tissue, such as nerve cells in the brain. |
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The successful generation of an unlimited supply of dopamine neurons could make neurotransplantation widely available for Parkinson's patients at some point in the future.
Scientists are trying to understand two fundamental properties of stem cells that relate to their long-term self-renewal: 1) why can embryonic stem cells proliferate for a year or more in the laboratory without differentiating, but most adult stem cells cannot; and 2) what are the factors in living organisms that normally regulate stem cell proliferation and self-renewal? Discovering the answers to these questions may make it possible to understand how cell proliferation is regulated during normal embryonic development or during the abnormal cell division that leads to cancer. |
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Embryonic stem cells that have proliferated in cell culture for six or more months without differentiating, are pluripotent, and appear genetically normal, are referred to as an embryonic stem cell line.
Once cell lines are established, or even before that stage, batches of them can be frozen and shipped to other laboratories for further culture and experimentation. |
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It does not detect genetic mutations in the cells. Determining whether the cells can be subcultured after freezing, thawing, and replating.
testing whether the human embryonic stem cells are pluripotent by 1) allowing the cells to differentiate spontaneously in cell culture; 2) manipulating the cells so they will differentiate to form specific cell types; or 3) injecting the cells into an immunosuppressed mouse to test for the formation of a benign tumor called a teratoma. |
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