

Weapon-X Mice 38
Bob Vila's Hammer writes "New Scientist has this article about a new breed of mice created in a lab. They have the ability to heal wounds very effectively as they have been genetically engineered to produce large amounts of a protein called angiopoietin-related growth factor. This AGF was found to be in high concentrations at the site of wounds and is expecting further study to ascertain its full potential use in treatments for skin disorders and diseases in humans."
They're thick-skinned too... (Score:2, Interesting)
Or their swollen ears, noses and eyelids.
beware the bezerker-mouse attack! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:beware the bezerker-mouse attack! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:beware the bezerker-mouse attack! (Score:1)
Curious... (Score:3, Funny)
Bob Vila's Hammer, eh? Paying attention to healing research becuase you hit the wrong nail one time too many?
Re:Curious... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm hoping that this technology can be used somehow to shorten the length of this type of reaction, but I guess more research is needed - the article only mentions injuries.
What I'm interested in is whether increased AGF healing still leaves scars. The article also didn't remark on that.
Re:Curious... (Score:4, Informative)
I would be willing to bet that scarring is minimal (with small injuries) as scar tissue is different than normal skin. This could potentially be a very lucrative drug target and I'll bet that big pharma will be doing some studies of their own soon. It'll be interesting to see what the result of the knockout study is...my bet is that it's embryonic lethal (loss of the gene during embryonic development causes the fetal mice to be non-viable).
Re:Curious... (Score:2)
Re:Curious... (Score:2)
Re:Curious... (Score:2)
Probably not. Anyone who's watched the show knows that Bob hardly ever did any of the work. Norm did all the tough stuff (and probably banged his fingers quite a bit).
a plan! (Score:4, Funny)
We should genetically modify some of these to have USB connectors first, though. Maybe FireWire, since they'll be all super and shit...
The Thing (Score:1)
about time... (Score:5, Funny)
About time to think about building a better mousetrap.
Re:about time... (Score:2)
2033 AD [slashdot.org]
And in other news... (Score:4, Funny)
The Ultimate Weapon (Score:5, Funny)
All I want are fricken mice with fricken laser beams attached to their heads, is that so much to ask?
don't you mean wolverine/logan? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:don't you mean wolverine/logan? (Score:2)
Re:don't you mean wolverine/logan? (Score:3, Informative)
Wolverine Mice naturally depicts a mouse with terrific claws, ragged teeth, and a terrible temper (the characteristics of a cross-breed: mouse and wolverine - impossible).
Weapon-X Mice sounds like a project or experiment - which is what produced this breed and one that still hints at the mutant healing factor that the comic character Wolverine uses.
What could be next! (Score:1)
Economic Benefits of Accelerated Healing (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Economic Benefits of Accelerated Healing (Score:1)
Except that the firm that does it will charge a rediculous amount, patent it to hell and a fair chunk of the benefits would end up lining shareholder and board member pockets.
IANAB, but I'm sure there's bound to be a downside - accelerating cell regneration and blood vessel growth is going to stress nearby cells, in some cases this could cause damage to telomeres and may lead to premature aging of the cells in the damaged areas.
Re:Economic Benefits of Accelerated Healing (Score:1)
Re:Economic Benefits of Accelerated Healing (Score:1)
Re:Economic Benefits of Accelerated Healing (Score:1)
You are such a humanist! You forgot to mention it might be better for the injured human being too.
Re:Economic Benefits of Accelerated Healing (Score:2)
Behold... (Score:2)
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What I would worry about (Score:2)
Blood clots are sometimes due to blood congealing/thickening when it shouldn't (as opposed to when it should, when you are hurt). Some tumours, cancer, and others are I also believe caused to accelerated cell-growth.
Having fast-healing wounds could be nice... but there could definately be nasty side effects. It might have a detriment to people who favour piercings too...
other mice, other wounds (Score:1)
Its a Stephenson reference, dear moderators (Score:2)
You did *what*? (Score:1)