The novel tool of cell reprogramming for applications in molecular medicine

被引:0
|
作者
Moritz Mall
Marius Wernig
机构
[1] Stanford University School of Medicine,Department of Pathology and Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine
来源
关键词
Cell fate; Reprogramming; Stem cell biology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent discoveries in the field of stem cell biology have enabled scientists to “reprogram” cells from one type to another. For example, it is now possible to place adult skin or blood cells in a dish and convert them into neurons, liver, or heart cells. It is also possible to literally “rejuvenate” adult cells by reprogramming them into embryonic-like stem cells, which in turn can be differentiated into every tissue and cell type of the human body. Our ability to reprogram cell types has four main implications for medicine: (1) scientists can now take skin or blood cells from patients and convert them to other cells to study disease processes. This disease modeling approach has the advantage over animal models because it is directly based on human patient cells. (2) Reprogramming could also be used as a “clinical trial in a dish” to evaluate the general efficacy and safety of newly developed drugs on human patient cells before they would be tested in animal models or people. (3) In addition, many drugs have deleterious side effects like heart arrhythmias in only a small and unpredictable subpopulation of patients. Reprogramming could facilitate precision medicine by testing the safety of already approved drugs first on reprogrammed patient cells in a personalized manner prior to administration. For example, drugs known to sometimes cause arrhythmias could be first tested on reprogrammed heart cells from individual patients. (4) Finally, reprogramming allows the generation of new tissues that could be grafted therapeutically to regenerate lost or damaged cells.
引用
收藏
页码:695 / 703
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The novel tool of cell reprogramming for applications in molecular medicine
    Mall, Moritz
    Wernig, Marius
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM, 2017, 95 (07): : 695 - 703
  • [2] Human Kidney Cell Reprogramming: Applications for Disease Modeling and Personalized Medicine
    O'Neill, Adam C.
    Ricardo, Sharon D.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2013, 24 (09): : 1347 - 1356
  • [3] In vivo cell reprogramming to pluripotency: exploring a novel tool for cell replenishment and tissue regeneration
    de Lazaro, Irene
    Kostarelos, Kostas
    [J]. BIOCHEMICAL SOCIETY TRANSACTIONS, 2014, 42 : 711 - 716
  • [4] Stem-Cell Reprogramming for Medicine
    Nguyen, Tuan H.
    [J]. CURRENT GENE THERAPY, 2013, 13 (02) : 71 - 72
  • [5] A Novel Molecular Tool Box for Fish Cell Analyses
    Gebert, Marina
    Kirchhof, Julia
    Rakers, Sebastian
    Kruse, Charli
    [J]. IN VITRO CELLULAR & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY-ANIMAL, 2012, 48 : 45 - 45
  • [6] REGENERATIVE MEDICINE Cell reprogramming gets direct
    Nicholas, Cory R.
    Kriegstein, Arnold R.
    [J]. NATURE, 2010, 463 (7284) : 1031 - 1032
  • [7] Somatic cell reprogramming as a tool for neurodegenerative diseases
    Ebrahimi, Ayyub
    Keske, Ezgi
    Mehdipor, Ahmad
    Ebrahimi-Kalan, Abbas
    Ghorbani, Meysam
    [J]. BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY, 2019, 112
  • [8] Generating Aptamers by Cell-SELEX for Applications in Molecular Medicine
    Ye, Mao
    Hu, Jun
    Peng, Minyuan
    Liu, Jing
    Liu, Jun
    Liu, Huixia
    Zhao, Xielan
    Tan, Weihong
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2012, 13 (03): : 3341 - 3353
  • [9] Transdifferentiation: a cell and molecular reprogramming process
    Sisakhtnezhad, Sajjad
    Matin, Maryam M.
    [J]. CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH, 2012, 348 (03) : 379 - 396
  • [10] Transdifferentiation: a cell and molecular reprogramming process
    Sajjad Sisakhtnezhad
    Maryam M. Matin
    [J]. Cell and Tissue Research, 2012, 348 : 379 - 396