Artificial Red Blood Cells and Platelets from Stem Cells!

11 Jan
January 11, 2011

There’s hema­tology news today, x 2 (at least):

flexible hydrogel par­ticles resem­bling RBCs in size and shape (Credit: Timothy Merkel and Joseph DeS­imone, Uni­versity of North Car­olina at Chapel Hill)

1. Progress in devel­oping syn­thetic red blood cells -

A Uni­versity of North Car­olina, Chapel Hill-​​based research group has created hydrogel par­ticles that mimic the size, shape and flex­i­bility of red blood cells (RBCs). The researchers used PRINT® (Par­ticle Repli­cation in Non-​​wetting Tem­plates) tech­nology to gen­erate the fake RBCs, which are said to have a rel­a­tively long half-​​life. The findings were reported on-​​line yes­terday in PNAS (abstract available, sub­scription required for full text). According to a PR-​​ish but inter­esting post on Futurity, a website put forth by a con­sortium of major research uni­ver­sities, tests of the par­ticles’ ability to perform func­tions such as trans­porting oxygen or car­rying ther­a­peutic drugs have not yet been conducted.

Devel­oping com­petent, arti­ficial RBCs is a hematologist’s holy grail of sorts, because with that you might alle­viate anemia without the risks of transfusion.

2. Progress in using human stem cells to gen­erate lots of platelets -

In an exciting paper pub­lished today in Cell Research, inves­ti­gators stim­u­lated human embryonic stem cells to become platelet-​​producing cells, called megakary­ocytes. According to the article (open-​​text at Nature PG), the platelets were pro­duced in abun­dance, appeared typical and clotted appro­pri­ately in response to stimuli in vitro. The researchers injected them into mice, used high-​​speed video microscopy for imaging, and demon­strated that the stem cell-​​derived human platelets con­tributed to clot for­mation in mice, in vivo (i.e., they seem to work).

The research team includes sci­en­tists at Harvard Medical School, the Uni­versity of Illinois and Cha Uni­versity in Seoul. Several authors are affil­iated with either or both of two biotech com­panies: Stem Cell and Regen­er­ative Med­icine Inter­na­tional (address in Marl­borough, MA) and Advanced Cell Tech­nology (head­quarters in Santa Monica, CA; lab in Marl­borough, MA).

Platelets are tiny blood cells essential in wound repair and clotting upon injury. For some patients with bone marrow dis­orders, such as leukemia, or chemotherapy-​​induced throm­bo­cy­topenia (low platelets) with bleeding, there’s a sig­nif­icant trans­fusion demand for this blood com­ponent. If safe, func­tional human platelets could be man­u­fac­tured from self-​​replicating stem cells in a lab, that would sig­nif­i­cantly reduce the need for platelets in the blood supply.

—-

Related Posts:

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,
0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Get Adobe Flash player
newsletter software