OHSU Turns Mouse into Factory for Human Liver Cells 93
Oregon Health & Science University researchers have figured out how to turn a mouse into a factory for human liver cells that can be used to test how pharmaceuticals are metabolized. The technique, published in the journal Nature Biotechnology, could soon become the gold standard not only for examining drug metabolism in the liver, which helps scientists determine a drug's toxicity, but also can be used as a platform for testing new therapies against infectious diseases that attack the liver, such as hepatitis C and malaria.
Won't somebody please think of the laptops? (Score:1, Funny)
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F.
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Downside... (Score:5, Funny)
predators develope a taste for human liver? (Score:1)
Re:Downside... (Score:5, Funny)
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Oh, wait, no, no... What if our Earth-conquering desires are constantly defeated by a combination of poor luck, gross incompetence, underestimating and overestimating the competence of the general public, and lack of communication?
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I've found someone who MUST have been treated; he likes dogs and craves cheese. More details here [wikipedia.org]. ;^)
The mouse problem (Score:2)
Interviewer: And when did you first notice these... shall we say... tendencies?
Confessor: Well... I was about seventeen and some mates and me went to a party, and, er... we had quite a lot to drink... and then some of the fellows there
Re:Great, but... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Angel of the Lord, what are these tortured screams?"
And the angel said unto me,
"These are the cries of the carrots,
the cries of the carrots.
You see, reverend Maynard, tomorrow is harvest day
and to them it is the holocaust."
And I sprang from my slumber drenched in sweat
like the tears of one millions terrified brothers
and roared,
"Hear me now,
I have seen the light,
they have a consciousness,
they have a life,
they have a soul.
damn you!
let the rabbits wear glasses,
save our brothers...can I get an amen?"
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If PETA want to rally against Michael Vick, or against testing on animals for research into, say, cosmetics - I'll be the first to join them. But I hope they don't have a problem with research of this sort.
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Indeed, so do the vast majority of their members. Yet despite all evidence to the contrary, they still donate. Weird.
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Devil's Advocate (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not much of a PETA supporter. I think that avoiding cruelty to animals is important, but I strongly object to the idea that we have no right to make use of them for food or for research into medicines that save human lives. However, I would like to point out that this line of reasoning is nigh-irrelevant in the context of thei
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The idea of advanced aliens races is plausible given Drake's equation and the idea of aliens abducting us for experimentation is not that far-fetched of an idea considering how many animals we tag and track or breed in captivity. I wonder if there are PETA type groups among ali
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Now that's just freaky... I was thinking this exact thing like a half-hour before I started reading the summary and comments for this article.
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I think you may want to avoid doing that in the future, as most human beings I know find it offensive to be thought of as an animal. In fact, if you were to say that out loud, many places in the US, I really don't think you'd like the outcome. And I'm not sure I'd help you out.
So, no, whatever your position is on mice, it is unrelated, and d
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Slavery is still occurring all over the world and even in parts of the US. It's just not government sanctioned like the way it was in the past.
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1) Not all slaves were black. Slavery and forced breeding have been practiced world-wide throughout history. It is a function of your own cultural biases that you equated the two and immediately took offense from that when what you should've taken offense at was the suggestion that abuse of slaves can be justified by the reason for their birth.
2) PETA members equate all humans and animals in terms of the rights they share. To a PETA member, there is no difference between the two because both
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Not all slaves were black.
Good for you, you pass. Look through this thread, nobody said all slaves were black. That would be your assumption. The quote was:
it sure sounds like you just equated (here in the USA, for example) people with black skin as animals
This is correct. In the United States of America, as I point out, there was a long, very culturally significant period of time in which people born with black skin were forced into slavery. The phrase "for example" means I am providing you with a subset of data, so that you may better understand WTF I am talking about, and w
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This is the sort of semantical parsing that I often see when people are embarrassed by having been caught in a bad argument and who are attempting to reframe it in a positive light. Wh
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This is necessary...
Life feeds on life
feeds on life..
Man, that was creepy!
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Good News for Hannibal Lecter (Score:4, Funny)
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Booze (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Booze (Score:4, Funny)
I was hoping that might be the case too.
You'll probably need to have a mouse grafted on under your right arm though
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Only if you chase it with one of these modified mice.
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(I hear that might be a turn of for the ladies... OTOH, you could do a killer 'Alien' impression.)
The difference.... (Score:2)
The OHSU team know wtf they're doing. Your team obviously didn't.
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Moved from crappy PHP to JSP and only the manager and lead developer got canned, maybe a bad choice somewhere...
Interesting...
Some people wanted to do that at our place a few years back, we stuck with crappy PHP and nobody got canned, we still don't use JSP and the company has grown a lot bigger since then (close to 100x), we still use crappy PHP and it works great.
Won't say much more, but it's how you use the tools, I find PHP a lot easier to deal with on the backend, JSP is too closed, convoluted and i
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Liver let die (Score:3, Funny)
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Animal Rights (Score:1, Interesting)
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My concern is that in the last several posts above, several mention these clowns [sfgate.com] and then essentially
Why mention them at all, and give them page-space and mind-share? That is what they live for; if you don't always agree with them, then why do their work for them? As our fearless leader often inappropriately chimes: "We don't want to embolden the enemy."
I think we should experiment on mice to save lives because I think people
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The reason people casually dismiss animals as non-thinking is so they can live with the idea of eating meat and using animal products for commerce. A close-up analysis of how their brains work would tell you that they aren't all that different from humans. People need to realize this.
I don't casually dismiss animals as non-thinking, and I don't disregard that they are very similar to humans (go mammals!). I agree with you, however, that more humans -- especially here in the US -- need to understand their responsibility as stewards of the entire planet, its plants and animals.
Death happens. Every time we step, we alter the ground beneath us in some fundamental way, for some species of life (a sprout, a spore, a gnat, a bacteria). To think that we even get the choice to not participate i
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While I wouldn't deny life saving produce from animals, on another level I know it is wrong. We are certainly more complicated than other animals. Believing we are 'better' is another thing...
Better at what? There are many things mouse are better us at.
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I'll take it for granted that it's "immoral" to kill someone (i think so), but is it immoral to kill someone if you're stranded on a mountain as a member of a group of plane-crash victims with no other sustenance? I'm not so sure that it is, if it means more will live.
It's an extreme case; but what I'm saying is not "the ends justify the means" but "because of the
Re:"good karma benefit"? (Score:2)
Yeah, if I were one of those crippled mice I'd be terribly proud. I know that as a member of the species responsible for engineering these Jem'Had
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Yeah, if I were one of those crippled mice I'd be terribly proud. I know that as a member of the species responsible for engineering these Jem'Hadar-like mice dependent upon this ketracel-white-like NTBC, I'm also terribly proud.
Would that be more or less proud than a mouse that was run over on the highway unnoticed? Is that considered a more honorable death in mouse culture (sorry, I am not familiar with the social conventions and religious beliefs of mice)? Or does it really not matter?
If YOU had and inherited liver disease... wait, did you say Jem'Hadar? You mean... they are fearsome warriors armed with intergalactic travel and energy weapons?! Well, why didn't you say so -- that's completely different!
I, for one, would like to
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Am I the only one... (Score:4, Funny)
I think it's not healthy that your first association with "mouse" is an input device and not a furry rodent. Guess it's time to check whether that yellow ball is still on top of that blue room.
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Giant mouse (Score:2)
Hmmm... (Score:1)
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While the human hepatocytes repopulate the mouse live
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correct me if I'm wrong... (Score:3, Insightful)
shouldn't they be doing research into organs that don't regenerate by themselves?
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Besides, the researchers probably specialize in livers, so having them research some other organ would be like telling a programmer to go design a bridge.
Who worries about hep C any more? (Score:1)
I'm more worried by the newer diseases like hepatitis C++.
In related news... (Score:1)