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Medicine News Science

Biologists Find Stem-Cell-Like Functions In Ordinary Cells 35

mattrandy123 writes with news that scientists from NYU and Utrecht University have discovered ordinary plant cells can fulfill some of the same regenerative functions previously attributed to stem cells. Quoting: "In the study, the researchers cut off the plant's root tip, thereby excising the stem cell niche, and examined the return of cell identities by measuring all gene activity. The results suggested that stem cells returned quite late in regeneration after other cells were already replaced. The researchers then used mutant plants in which the stem cell niche no longer functions to confirm their initial observations. Despite the absence of the stem cell niche, the plant's ordinary cells worked to regenerate all the major tissues constituting the root tip — a process that began hours after it had been removed. However, researchers found that plants without functional stem cell niches could not resume normal growth, showing that other cells did not replace all functions of stem cells."
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Biologists Find Stem-Cell-Like Functions In Ordinary Cells

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  • Well DUH! (Score:1, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Anybody who's seen Invasion of the Body Snatchers already knew this...

  • Dangit, Gundam 00! You said Louise couldn't have her hand regenerated because her stem cells in her hand were destroyed! I actually felt sorry for her and now I know better, you insensitive clods!
  • Animal (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mixmatch ( 957776 ) on Saturday January 31, 2009 @09:40AM (#26676713) Homepage
    How much of this research transfers over to the animal kingdom?
    • Re:Animal (Score:5, Informative)

      by sam_handelman ( 519767 ) <samuel.handelmanNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Saturday January 31, 2009 @10:18AM (#26677073) Journal

      None, zero and zilch.

        Plants and animals have a distinct origin of multicellularity. Many of the genes used to control patterning are homologous between the two clades, but that's as far as it goes.

        Now, something similar may very well happen in some animals, where somatic tissue cells resume dividing in response to injury. But these experiments tell you nothing about that, one way or another.

  • plants are easy (Score:4, Informative)

    by Fëanáro ( 130986 ) on Saturday January 31, 2009 @09:43AM (#26676723)

    I thought getting a new plants from a few cells was something possible for a long time, and quite easy?

    Often simply putting a piece into soil has a gopod chance of success, and with the right chemical treatment, anything is possible?

    This would imply the existence of these stem-cell like cells, but it does not translate that well to animals.

    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      This is fairly true for many plant cells. They form many of their different cell types much later in their life cycle and are not "born" with these cell types already present. Therefore, of course they need some sort of stem-cell-like capability for normal development.

      So this is really not news.

  • by soupforare ( 542403 ) on Saturday January 31, 2009 @09:55AM (#26676775)
    I, for one, welcome our new plant-duck mutant hybrid masters.
    • by Electron ( 598 )

      I, for one, will NEVER welcome plant-duck mutant hybrid masters!

      Plant-duck mutant hybrid overlords, on the other hand...

  • Okay, we all know where this is going, so might as well collect all the trolls under one thread. Here goes:

    Bush banned stem cell research, holding back cures that would have been available during the Obama administration.

    Good, now that *that* little piece of misinformation is out of the way, I'd like to add just one thing more. It appears to me that while this discovery is promising, it will do nothing to mollify the supporters of embryonic stem cell research (ECS). It's not that ECS proponents reall

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I'm probably just feeding the trolls: it's hard to imagine that anyone actually believes this; but here goes.

      At the time Roe v Wade was decided, it was not commonly known that a person's physical characteristics were uniquely determined at conception.

      A person's physical characteristics depend on much more than genetics (e.g. nutrition and exercise) but, anyway, classical genetics has been around for over a hundred years. Certainly, there has been progress in the fields of development and genetics since Roe v. Wade but I'm not aware of any fundamental paradigm shifts.

      The other point here is that "conception" is actually a fairly complex process. A

  • Anonymous Coward (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    It's great that GWB coerced researchers to find alternate sources of stem cells, otherwise every walk-in clinic in the country would be blending embryos in the back room by now. Tom Dickson would be proud.

    • by jbengt ( 874751 ) on Saturday January 31, 2009 @01:14PM (#26678519)
      Think of the seedlings!
    • by mangu ( 126918 )

      It's great that GWB coerced researchers to find alternate sources of stem cells, otherwise every walk-in clinic in the country would be blending embryos in the back room by now.

      Of course, if embryonic stem cell research had not faced such resistance, then we might have had more results helping humans instead of plants by now.

      That many plants can be cloned simply by cutting parts of them I have known since I was a small child. Now what we would like to know is how to make parts of human bodies regenerate in

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