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Stemcell lines grow in a new medium

Scientists at a laboratory affiliated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison have developed a stem-cell culture medium free of animal cells and used it to derive two new human embryonic stem-cell lines.

Published on: Jan 3, 2006, 12:20:00 IST
PTI | By , Washington
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Scientists at a laboratory affiliated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison have developed a stem-cell culture medium free of animal cells and used it to derive two new human embryonic stem-cell lines.

The new work, reported in the journal Nature Biotechnology, is a crucial step in stem-cell research because it will allow growth of these cells without using animal products that can harbour viruses and other potential sources of problems.

“This work helps us clear some of the major hurdles for using these cells therapeutically,” wrote Tenneille Ludwig, the UW-Madison research scientist at the WiCell Research Institute, who led the work on developing in the new medium.

The development comes as the push for stem-cell research has been shaken by the discrediting of South Korean scientist Hwang Woo-suk’s claim to have produced tailored embryonic stem cells, and as US lawmakers consider expanding funding for stem-cell research. Successfully growing living cells outside the body generally requires providing the cells in a lab dish with the right mix of nutrients, hormones, growth factors and blood serum.

This method often depends on animal cells, such as those obtained from mouse embryos in the case of embryonic stem cells, to keep the cells alive and thriving in the culture. Many scientists worry that animal viruses and other agents might be taken up in the human cells and could infect human patients if those cells were to be used for therapy.

“All of the concerns about contaminating proteins in existing stem cell lines can essentially be removed using this medium,” wrote Ludwig. The two new Wisconsin stem cell lines have survived for more than seven months in the new culture medium, but one line had an abnormal chromosome at four months and the second developed an abnormality by seven months, according to the report.

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