Nerve Cells Made From Blood Cells 40
BarbaraHudson writes: CBC reports that Canadian scientists are turning blood into nerve cells. They do so by manipulating stem cells that have been taken from a patient's blood, eventually switching them into neural stem cells (abstract). These can then give rise to multiple different nerve cells suitable for use in the rest of the body. Team leader Mick Bhatia said, "We can actually take a patient's blood sample, as routinely performed in a doctor's office, and with it we can produce one million sensory neurons. We can also make central nervous system cells." They're working on turning the neural stem cells into motor neurons for treatment of diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
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Welcome to slashdot!
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Thats just standard level retardedness apparently.
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My guess: probably yes, but it would be impractical.
Blood is more readily available.
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"... The main problem with an in vivo approach would be targeting specific locations or cells rather than miniaturization. How do you get the nanobots to go only where you want them to go?"
Only one of about a dozen critical problems with using real nanobots. The most obvious of course is that 'nanobots' don't actually yet exist.. For a brief period I worked on assemblers way back around 1991, they were about 10 to 20 years away then - and they are still about 10 to 20 years away today..
To build an assembler
Re:Wouldn't the new cells have the same diseases? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you are researching in the Neuroscience field, you have a simple descision: either you accept that most grant money is inside the "curing Altzheimer" corner, and start constructing a story how your research can heal patients from Altzheimer, Parkinson or HIV, or you are heroic and don't get grant money. Your competition does get the money though, so you end up with them having an advantage.
I mean this is an effect of giving money only to research that has curing these illnesses as goal. If you do the groundwork, you don't get any money, so you have to do some of the higher level stuff too, which perhaps others would do if grants were fairly distributed. You can debate whether this is good or bad, both sides have their points.
Re:Wouldn't the new cells have the same diseases? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think this is a pretty huge problem. People want to skip all the necessary intermediate steps (like ensuring you are measuring the correct thing) and jump right to the cure. There are tons of examples where some assay is used over and over but no one has ever really fully characterized what is going on. Like this:
http://neurotheory.columbia.edu/~ken/cargo_cult.html
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I think that article should be required reading for any scientist, and repeated before running ANY experiment (on animals or humans).
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Great quote cargo cult science is a great name for it. I know - am working on (against) what has to be one of the biggest examples in the whole of science - general relativity. In short general relativity has a really stupid flaw that makes the whole theory a complete nonsense, but this flaw only really appears in the FTL part of its geometry.
One fairly simple way of describing the flaw - The speed of light C isn't just a speed but also has a direction (is a vector). Put light as vector into the system and
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which perhaps others would do if grants were fairly distributed
Translation: everybody who wants grant money should get it. There should be an infinite supply of other people's money so that everyone engaged in their own pet field of research should be able to do whatever they want, indefinitely, without worrying about demonstrating to anyone else that what they're working on is more interesting, more useful, or even sane, compared to the next guy's project. That would be truly fair. The guy looking to synthesize unicorn DNA from horses and narwhals should definitely g
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Re:Wouldn't the new cells have the same diseases? (Score:4, Insightful)
Parkinsons and alzheimers are neurodegenerative diseases, it takes time for the degeneration to happen.
It's like replacing a rust eaten component with a new shiny steel one. Yes it will also rust eventually but it will keep things working until then.
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I'm unclear as to why the new cells wouldn't be subject to Parkinson's and Alzheimer's. Wouldn't they just get the same diseases as the existing cells? Same genetics and environment should lead to the same result.
Both diseases often overcome a patient later in life, leading us to believe the degenerative effects might be forestalled further by the introduction of healthy young nerve cells.
It seems like this would be more helpful for trauma treatments where the neurological damage was caused by an event that will not be repeated.
It is helpful for the study of all human neurological problems, as human neural cells are difficult to acquire for research purposes. FTA: most research is done with a line of rat neural cells.
Re: Wouldn't the new cells have the same diseases? (Score:5, Informative)
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Related to this?
"Study pinpoints the likeliest rodent sources of future human infectious diseases"
http://www.sciencedaily.com/re... [sciencedaily.com]
Good, this is the future (Score:2)
I wish I could repair the arthrosis in my neck, I'm an otherwise fit man and I get nailed down by bizarre pains that strike me down when I walk. I can't bike anymore either as my neck hurts like crazy. All I need is to regrow the thin layer of biological Teflon between my vertebrae I guess.
I'm baffled as to why my body seems to be able to grow an endless supply of utterly useless hairs and cherry angiomas, but a few microns worth of slippery fat on the end of my bones? Nope. Not happening.
Clearly my cells w
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biology is really still in its infancy
To say the least!
We have design drawings and manuals for computers and such. Somebody a long time ago lost the manuals for the human body. ;-}
Unless we can find copies of them, it will be a long grind to make more from scratch.
Until then, our best are not much more than tinkerers. 8-{
(With all due respect to the hard-working medical researchers! Thank you.)
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I'm baffled as to why my body seems to be able to grow an endless supply of utterly useless hairs and cherry angiomas, but a few microns worth of slippery fat on the end of my bones? Nope. Not happening.
Clearly my cells were able to do it ONCE, can we do it again, please?
This is the future, electronics is mature, computers have become this hermetic playground whose benefits elude me, but biology is really still in its infancy.
It's because we are trying to make science do what we are not made for, You and I have lived long past our useful and biological lifetimes.
I was listening to a Ted Talk on stopping the aging process. It was interesting, but in the end, the people involved sounded rather demented, like Dr Frankenstein only less shrill.
And sad to say, all the years added to our lives are at the wrong end. If I could be in my 30's for an extra 40 years, that might be okay. But even the people who live to be in theier ear
I'm glad to see... (Score:1)
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BS "we did it first" claims (Score:2, Informative)
The scientists that published that just must not be up on their literature or the author is just confused and the scientists are trying to talk up their research.
turning blood into nerve cells (Score:1)
I always knew (Score:2)