Creating Sperm from Skin

Researchers create early stage sperm cells from induced pluripotent stem cells, raising hopes that infertile men could be fathers.

Written byHayley Dunning
| 1 min read

Register for free to listen to this article
Listen with Speechify
0:00
1:00
Share

Men made infertile by cancer treatments could have their fertility restored by creating new sperm from their own skin samples, researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine reported last week (August 23) in Cell Reports. While there is the opportunity for men to bank their sperm before undergoing cancer treatment, this doesn't help young, pre-pubescent boys or men who didn’t plan that far ahead, lead author Charles Easley told The Telegraph.

“There are procedures to store testicular tissue prior to cancer therapy, but men who didn’t have the opportunity to save tissue are permanently sterile, and so far there are no cures for their sterility,” he said.

Easley and colleagues developed an in vitro culture to generate human induced pluripotent stem cells from adult skin samples, and differentiate the cells into advanced male germ cell lineages, including post-meiotic, spermatid-like cells. The technique mirrors the in vivo process, and ...

Interested in reading more?

Become a Member of

The Scientist Logo
Receive full access to more than 35 years of archives, as well as TS Digest, digital editions of The Scientist, feature stories, and much more!
Already a member? Login Here
December digest cover image of a wooden sculpture comprised of multiple wooden neurons that form a seahorse.
December 2025, Issue 1

Wooden Neurons: An Artistic Vision of the Brain

A neurobiologist, who loves the morphology of cells, turns these shapes into works of art made from wood.

View this Issue
Alzheimer: Phosphorylation of Tau proteins leads to disintegration of microtubuli in a neuron axon stock photo

Advancing Alzheimer’s Disease Detection with Brain-Derived pTau217 Assays

Alamar Biosciences logo
Abstract pattern of multicolored circles on a dark background, representing immune cell diversity and single-cell sequencing resolution.

Exploring Immune Diversity at the Single-Cell Level

parse-biosciences-logo
Stacks of cell culture dishes, plates, and flasks with pink cell culture medium on a white background.

Driving Innovation with Cell Culture Essentials

Merck
Stacks of cell culture dishes, plates, and flasks with pink cell culture medium on a white background.

Driving Innovation with Cell Culture Essentials

MilliporeSigma purple logo

Products

Beckman Logo

Beckman Coulter Life Sciences Introduces the Biomek i3 Benchtop Liquid Handler, a Small but Mighty Addition to its Portfolio of Automated Workstations

brandtech logo

BRANDTECH® Scientific Announces Strategic Partnership with Copia Scientific to Strengthen Sales and Service of the BRAND® Liquid Handling Station (LHS) 

Top Innovations 2026 Contest Image

Enter Our 2026 Top Innovations Contest

Biotium Logo

Biotium Expands Tyramide Signal Amplification Portfolio with Brighter and More Stable Dyes for Enhanced Spatial Imaging