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by Aileen Constans

HOT PAPERS

Another Chapter in Going from Blood to Brain
Back-to-back papers fuel controversy on adult stem-cell plasticity and brain repair

Email: Aileen Constans - aconstans@the-scientist.com
The Scientist 2005, 19(21):20

Published 7 November 2005

While politicos continue to debate the ethics of expanding research on embryonic stem cells, the scientific debate persists as to whether adult stem cells are multipotent, or if they even need to be in order to be therapeutically relevant. Two Hot Papers appearing within a span of two weeks in early 2003 further revealed that one might in fact be able to teach an old cell new tricks. Eva Mezey and colleagues at the National Institutes of Health and Johns Hopkins, and Helen Blau's group at Stanford University, showed that transplanted bone marrow-derived stem cells could not only populate the human brain, but also contribute – either through transdifferentiation or fusion – to neural cells.[1,2]


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