Fully Functional Bioengineered Tooth Grown In a Mouse 264
A couple of weeks back the Wall Street Journal reported on the first organ grown in vivo from stem cells — a tooth in the mouth of a mouse. Reader cdrpsab spotted the news on the MedGadget blog; the research had been reported earlier in the PNAS. From the WSJ: "The researchers at the Tokyo University of Science created a set of cells that contained genetic instructions to build a tooth, and then implanted this 'tooth germ' into the mouse's empty tooth socket. The tooth grew out of the socket and through the gums, as a natural tooth would. Once the engineered tooth matured, after 11 weeks, it had a similar shape, hardness and response to pain or stress as a natural tooth, and worked equally well for chewing. The researchers suggested that using similar techniques in humans could restore function to patients with organ failure."
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:I have a friend who grew a tooth. (Score:5, Funny)
Got a bit of shark in him, eh?
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how'd you know? (Score:4, Funny)
did you see the laser beam on his head?
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Re:I have a friend who grew a tooth. (Score:5, Funny)
Got a bit of shark in him, eh?
jcr: "No, Why?"
shark: "Does he want some?"
*rimshot*
Re:I have a friend who grew a tooth. (Score:4, Informative)
It wouldn't be bad if humans were able to grow new teeth every thirty to forty years or so.
Teeth wear down, cracks and so on so it would sure not be bad.
Re:I have a friend who grew a tooth. (Score:4, Informative)
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Actually yeah. If you look to the animal kingdom you will find that old animals do indeed have worn down teeth that are no longer sharp and effective.
Humans wear out joints, spines, feet, wrists, hearts, livers, kidneys, etc from those parts just doing what they were meant to do.
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I had three of one of my front teeth when I was rather young. The second one was a gnarled twisted mass. :\
Be grateful you hadn't born in ancient Sparta.
Perhaps not as interesting but (Score:2)
I was always dreading having my wisdom teeth taken out.
While in the Army I had a cracked molar that had to be removed and the dentist says, "Look at the good side, you were born without wisdom teeth".
Re:I have a friend who grew a tooth. (Score:4, Insightful)
but you know what, if we could genetically turn on the tooth regrowing function in our bodies to give us our third set of teeth at say age 40 global health would go up drastically.
Most people have a incredibly horrid mess in their mouth. Dentistry is horribly overpriced and Dental insurance in the developed world is worthless so most people do not take care of their teeth. Your teeth health is directly coupled to your general health. If you have a mouth full of rotten and abscessed teeth your general health is going down, plus the continuous pain can easily be mis diagnosed as depression.
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So, I had a friend who regrew his foreskin twice after circumcision in a similar manner.... Actually, I believe his father did as well.
Sounds to me that's natures way of saying, "Stop that shit!"
Fully Functional Bioengineered Tooth Growing (Score:2, Funny)
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Strange Leap (Score:5, Funny)
The submitter got me, I have to admit. I was reading the summary, thinking that it would end with "could allow humans to regrow teeth"... but they pulled a zigzag, and went a different direction. Organs. Wow. Did M. Knight Shamalyan write this summary?
Re:Strange Leap (Score:5, Informative)
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Especially considering that bones are organs, and teeth and bone are very similar indeed !
Re:Strange Leap (Score:4, Interesting)
I can see Toonol's worries here. The ovaries contain single cells that ought to grow into a whole being when fertilized. Sometimes, these go wrong, and you get something else. These other things are usually hair, teeth, or occasionally eyes (eeww!). However, you don't get a fingernail or a kidney or a brain. This is probably because hair, teeth and eyes can be 'seeded' from a single cell, where other organs probably develop from a coordinated modification of a set of cells.
This is not to say that there isn't come magic genetic 'sudo' command that allows you to ask for a left kidney, medium size, but we haven't seen any sign of it yet.
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Perhaps we can't "seed" a more complex organ such as a kidney, (Although I thought that eyes were pretty damn complex organs, what with the lenses and rods and cones and such.) but perhaps through study we can come to understand the more complex interactions of genomes that creates a kidney or a liver and one day grow replacement parts without the ghoulish proposition of cloned complete human "parts farms".
Of course, we all know that most of the research is going to end up in the breast augmentation and hai
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don't underestimate the power of human desire for longevity. If it's possible, and people will pay for it, there certainly will be human parts farms consisting of whole bodies from which owners draw spares. Just give it some time.
Wasn't there a movie about this?
Anyway, yes, it'll happen. The only catch is the brain, if you can grow the bodies without one, there won't even be objections to having such a factory in your neighborhood. Imagine all the automobile plants converted to organ farms.
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In the short term, I'll be happy with teeth. Maybe when I'm older and have to worry about kidney failure or heart failure, I'll want them to have progressed to the point where they can simply grow a new one for me, but for now I'd like to see the ability for them to pull a rotten tooth out of my head and inject a few cells into the gum to regrow a tooth a few years from now rather than have to put in a bridge or some other garbage like they would now.
My wife's had problems with her teeth from a very young a
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Re:Strange Leap (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem with growing organs is that in order to get cells to multiply you have to disable certain genes in those cells, or at least reset their counters. Which genes ? Well those that guard against cancer ...
Our bodies go to great lengths to prevent cells from multiplying anywhere and it is only allowed by the human DNA in very specific cases : blood production in the bone marrow, when a woman becomes pregnant, and just before a woman gives birth. There are others, but those are major modifications of human cell's normal reproduction. The body goes to great lengths to prevent cell division in organs once a human being is born, instead choosing to do the bulk of the necessary divisions before birth and then letting those already-existing cells enlarge instead of divide to make a child grow. That's not to say there is no cell division involved in growing a child, but a lot less than you'd think from the size difference.
All 3 of those exceptions are also major causes of cancer : leukemia, endometrial cancer and breast cancer.
Getting stuff to grow is easy, just kill of the p70 gene. Getting stuff to grow safely is hard. Very very hard. Loads of research still need to be done before this can really be risked in a live human being.
Re:Strange Leap (Score:5, Insightful)
Repeated injuries can cause cancer (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Repeated injuries can cause cancer (Score:4, Funny)
*reads this as he massages the inside of his cheek that he bit for the fifth time this year*
Well shit.
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"Which genes ? Well those that guard against cancer ..."
Which brings up an interesting point... Since our lives depend critically on the controlled death (apoptosis) of cells. A lot of people don't fully grasp that controlled death of cells is absolutely critical to maintaining limb, bodily form, and organ integrity (eyes, hands, creating fingers)
You can see what happens here when when apoptosis goes wrong:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Celldeath.jpg [wikipedia.org]
Thank goodness for controlled cell death.
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I'm not sure if I'd even call that webbed, at least tell me they could speak to fish.
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Thank goodness for controlled cell death.
When will this egregious practice of planned cell abortion finally be ended?! Cells are living things too!
Disclaimer: while the above is definitely a joke, I firmly oppose abortion; doing so on the ground of ethics and morality based on Bible principles.
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Our bodies go to great lengths to prevent cells from multiplying anywhere and it is only allowed by the human DNA in very specific cases : blood production in the bone marrow, when a woman becomes pregnant, and just before a woman gives birth.
W. T. F.
Tell that to the numerous wounds I have received over the years, which no longer exist as if by magic.
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thats only 1 line of code that needs to be added . . . this shouldnt be too hard ;)
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The problem with growing organs is that in order to get cells to multiply you have to disable certain genes in those cells, or at least reset their counters. Which genes ? Well those that guard against cancer ...
OTH cancer can often be treated with surgery to the point where the body can't do without the lost tissue. If the tissue can be regrown the surgery may not be such a bad idea. Maybe we have to prune our bodies like trees.
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Tell that to Hedwig and his(?) angry inch.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0248845/ [imdb.com]
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Getting stuff to grow is easy, just kill of the p70 gene. Getting stuff to grow safely is hard. Very very hard. Loads of research still need to be done before this can really be risked in a live human being.
would you care to give a reference for p70 being used to create iPS (induced pluripotency)? As far as I am aware the genes typically used are oct-4, sox2, c-myc, nanog, lin28, klf4 and p53 (both p53 and c-myc are oncogenes, the rest are not) Interestingly a paper was published a few months ago which describes a method for transient expression of these genes. This eliminates (or at least greatly reduces) the risk of cancer arising from stem cell treatment as the expression of any oncogenes is only long en
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Ditto (Score:2)
Of cour
Organ Transplants? (Score:2, Flamebait)
How about restoring functions to ... teeth?
You don't need to be suffering from periodontal disease to know that missing or otherwise bad teeth are real enough issues for ordinary people. With the possible exception of friends from across the pond, of course. ;-)
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Implanting fake teeth isn't a terribly fun procedure, nor are fake teeth perfect; but our ability to replace teeth with synthetic equivalents is a hell of a lot better than our ability to replace most any other organ with synthetic equivalents(and, even if we don't bother, a missing tooth will kill you a lot more slowly than most other missing organs). For organs where synthetic re
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I suspect that that is on the docket as well, once the kinks are worked out; but it has a rather different risk/reward ratio.
But that's the part that I don't get. The article(s) as written make no mention of the value of growing teeth but instead talk about organ transplants.
As for the risk/reward ratio, isn't it the case, for example, that big pharma prefers to invest heavily in both R&D and advertising for drugs that are geared to ordinary problems for ordinary people rather than complex diseases? T
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My point was just that, with a new technique, particularly one using stem cells and stimulating cell growth, there might well be risks. Possibly nothing, possibly just a tendency to form benign tumors that have to be removed, possibly full blown cancer, possibly other stuff. For some organs, "Well, we can grow you a new one; but yo
It's a scam (Score:4, Funny)
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Ironically, pretty much just candy. Thankfully, not MUCH candy.
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Human Pancreas? (Score:5, Informative)
Yours sincerely,
Dean, on behalf of millions of Type I diabetics
P.S. I *love* hearing about this stuff. The potential for helping millions is incredible.
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If you are type 1 then your immune system would destroy any pancreatic islet cells implanted. Type 2 diabetics who are insulin resistant with a burnt out pancreas would be choicer targets for this type of therapy. Type 1 diabetics will be waiting for an immunological solution first.
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As a Type 1 diabetic myself it really makes my day when something new and cool like this pops up on my screen. I vaguely remember some doctor-or-some-such saying a few years back that diabetes is a disease that should have been cured (or at least fixable) 30 years ago. If not for the fact that medical companies have an income from insulin, needles, and other paraphernalia as stable as WoW subscriptions and probably a goodly bit bigger, it probably would have. Though I am pleased to see there have been actua
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Fix 1: we don't yet know reliable and safe ways to transplant genes using viruses.
Fix 2: way worse than the disease for most of people.
A much more sane variant of Fix 2 is transplantation of islet cells, grown from patient's own stem cells. I'm sure one day it'll be there.
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No, I don't have diabetes, but my girlfriend does. Believe me, I understand that it can be miserable and painful. And I also know about multitude of complications resulting from diabetes (like feet rotting and falling off or kidney diseases).
Transplantation of the whole pancreas is possible. It's actually routinely performed right now. However, bear in mind that 1 year survival is about 95% and 10% patients still have to use insulin injections even after transplantation. And don't forget lifetime use of imm
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Quite an arrogant thing for you to say (assuming that you, for the sake of validity of your argument, would have told us if you actually have diabetes).
It may be arrogant, but they are, in my opinion, right. If you put effort in to actually controlling diabetes, you should be able to avoid complications for most of your life. I know a couple of diabetics with T1 for over 40 years and no complications; I have spoken with diabetics who have had it for over 50 years with minimal complications. These are people that, initially, could only test their urine for glucose, they had no idea what their blood sugar was doing, and they had horrible peaky insulins whic
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http://www.novocell.com/tech/encapsulation.html [novocell.com]
Those guys are using cell encapsulation as a way to hide islet cells from the immune system, it is showing very promising results. Of course a decent supply of transplant material is still a problem.
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Note that the text hasn't been updated since ~2005 and their initial human trial was, according to them, a success. To a diabetic, a staggering, mindblowing success! Apparently, the islets were injected subcutaneously whereupon they went on to regulate the test subjects blood glucose levels for up to 20 months, without long term immunosuppression! Why am I not receiving this treatment right now? Can I sue the Norwegian government for attempted murder? =(
Yes, yes, availability of spare parts etc. Screw tha
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Retroviral treatment sometimes works. The problem is we don't have any way of telling where to put the genes we're inserting, and if they insert in the wrong place, the cell could do nasty things: become cancerous, start pumping out odd hormones, start pumping out herpesvirus, are a few that come to mind. It can be done, and has been done, but it's not easy.
Replacement of the entire auto-immune
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Transplants require immunosuppressants so are really only open to those already undergoing a kidney transplant.
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I also seem to remember an article about a female professor at a British university who cured rats who's pancreas had been removed. I can't for the life of me find the article, but the process as described consisted of treating the rats with one common drug that kills white blood cells and another drug that had a less-known side effect of somehow making the auto-immune system not produce the beta-cell attacking basta.. *cough* cells.
This research was done to find a way to prepare a patient for transplant an
Re:Human Pancreas? (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, there are islet cell therapies on the horizon: http://stemcells.nih.gov/info/scireport/chapter7.asp [nih.gov]
Old News? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Old News? (Score:4, Informative)
I have bad teeth (Score:5, Interesting)
They're horrible, and I live in the United States, a culture where teeth are perfect and white or you are nothing. My wife has beautiful teeth, and despite the fact that we have nearly identical brushing and dental care habits, my teeth are horrid, yellow, and falling to pieces, hers are beautiful, white, and basically no cavities.
Sorry - not all teeth are created equal.
So here I am, 30-something, fairly affluent, and having horrid teeth. You think I wouldn't hesitate to spend a few Gs replacing my craptastic old teeth with new teeth with zero chance of rejection? Sure, they will go yellow quickly, just like the last ones did, but that means I'm in my 80s or later before my teeth are in any way unusual. And effectively, that means good teeth for life.
I've been waiting for this kind of treatment. Where do I sign up?
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I'm pretty sure those whitening kits would be much cheaper.
They don't do much to help teeth that are literally crumbling in your mouth (or did you miss the "falling to pieces" bit in the GP?), and they are most definitely not cheaper than the bridge I had to get earlier this year.
(Had a front tooth broken/knocked out a few years back, and the same accident cracked the teeth on either side of that one.)
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Creating stem cells from other tissues is possible, but adds extra costs. We all know how pharmaceutical companies love to throw money away, don't we...
Seriously, though, this is a lab test. Human trials are so far into the future your kid
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You sign up with the people who aren't religious zealots, believing that life begins at conception and preventing the use of embrionic stem cells.
The above is false if you live in the USA. The embryonic stem cells research was never illegal just denied Government funding in most cases. If you do not live in the USA, what country denied the use of embryonic stem cells research. Tim S.
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Wait, _what_? This is a really absurdly ignorant non-sequitor.
Embryonic stem cells have nothing to do with this mouse experiment. These were adult stem cells.
Take your zealotry and anti-religious pogrom elsewhere -- it doesn't even apply here.
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Wow... someone who feels the same way about medical science as I do. Butchers indeed, albeit highly skilled butchers - still I second the opinion that other than more advanced tools and drugs, the treatments for injury and natural decay seem really really outdated compared to the other technologies we employ on a daily basis.
I disagree that this won't be available in our lifetime (we being the 30 somethings, who are having children now). We may be in our 50s before it's a normal procedure but hey that still
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"I've been waiting for this kind of treatment. Where do I sign up?"
You'll be in your 80s before this is accepted.
If you follow medical treatment, stuff that comes up is rarely ever implemented, mainly due to patents, laziness, threat of lawsuits, inventors/business wannabe be paid far more than the treatment is worth, FDA regulations, some muppet whines about safety and testing that has nothing to do with safety or testing, etc.
See the post about someone asking for a new pancreas (really asking for new insu
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One of the reasons military applications of medical advancements go to market so quickly is that there is a large body of "volunteers" for human trials who have little or no chance of ever successfully suing the makers of the drugs or devices tested on them (and usually don't even know they're part of some sort of test in the first place).
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Ahh, no. First off, there is no such thing currently as artificial blood. You are referring to oxygen therapeutics, which are substances that carry oxygen. These are NOT ready for prime time, see excerpt from the Wikipedia article below. But besides that, blood is enormously complex, and does a
Re:I have bad teeth (Score:4, Interesting)
Question. Did you grow up somewhere drinking naturally non-fluoridated water? Did your land have a well rather than a hookup to city / county water supply?
I also have horrid teeth (not as bad as yours sound but still bad enough) and I grew up without fluoride treatments or fluoridated water - just wondering if there is a correlation at least. Hopefully it is also causation and I can worry less about dental bills for my kids as they grow up (even with replacement teeth, keeping the original teeth in good shape is still cheaper).
thanks
Fantastic news... (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder if this treatment will be available through NHS dentists once it is perfected.
ROFLMFAO I crack myself up sometimes.
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Good point. This, like dental implants, is destined to be a high end treatment for the wealthy. Po' folks will have to do with dentures.
Tags (Score:3, Informative)
Smoke 'em if ya got 'em.
Toughest tag to parse, EVAR!
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Screw growing new organs ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, not entirely, but seriously - they've come up with a way to grow new teeth for mammals.
Personally, I would love it if I could go to the dentist and have him replace some of my bad teeth with new ones. One or two at a time would be fine.
Instead of getting fake teeth or fillings when you've abused your teeth to the point where the enamel on the outside of the tooth has worn away, exposing the dentine ... if I could get those replaced? I'd almost be willing to kill for that.
Sure, it'd take time to regrow a new tooth, but I could live with that.
So yeah, screw growing new organs - get me some new teeth!
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My dentist has all sorts of new tech in his office. Digital X-ray, a 3D rapid prototyping machine for making crowns, and a digital camera wand for taking pictures of the teeth. He showed me my tooth after I had lost a filling. It was three quarters gone. Lost enamel indeed. Pfft! Child's play.
Re:Start small? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think not.
You'd be putting the tooth fairy out of business.
Re:Start small? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Start small? (Score:4, Funny)
The tooth fairy would then receive a bailout package.
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That's okay. She's a bogeyman anyway.
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She builds her castle out of them.
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I think above or below would probably be better for DP, don't know about DV or DA.
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When I got a tooth cap I asked the tech who made.. (Score:2)
(I have a cap because someone through a spoon at me once. :-()
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Every dentist does this at least once.