15/10/02说明:此前论坛服务器频繁出错,现已更换服务器。今后论坛继续数据库备份,不备份上传附件。

肝胆相照论坛

 

 

肝胆相照论坛 论坛 学术讨论& HBV English 科学家首次获得转化型肝脏细胞
查看: 975|回复: 5
go

科学家首次获得转化型肝脏细胞 [复制链接]

Rank: 6Rank: 6

现金
786 元 
精华
帖子
152 
注册时间
2006-1-8 
最后登录
2012-10-12 
1
发表于 2011-5-13 16:20 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览 |打印
本帖最后由 风雨不动 于 2012-4-14 15:18 编辑

科学家首次获得转化型肝脏细胞
转化型肝脏细胞移植肝衰竭小鼠一半存活


5月12日,国际学术期刊《自然》在线发表了中国科学院上海生命科学研究院生物化学与细胞生物学研究所惠利健研究小组关于转化型肝脏细胞的研究成果,证明肝脏以外的体细胞可以被诱导直接转化为肝脏细胞,为将来从病人自身体细胞诱导获得肝脏细胞进行移植的应用奠定了基础。

人体的皮肤、血液、神经、肝脏等终末分化的功能细胞是由多能干细胞分化而来,在自然界,这个过程是不可逆的,但从理论来看,通过生物工程它是可逆的。科学家已通过实验方法将皮肤细胞转化为多能干细胞,然后又把多能干细胞分化为肝脏细胞。而该研究则简化了这一过程,将小鼠尾巴上的皮肤成纤维细胞直接诱导为肝脏细胞,这种细胞具有和体内肝脏细胞类似的上皮细胞形态、基因表达谱、且获得了肝脏细胞的功能。

研究所通过实验发现,将转化型肝脏细胞移植于肝衰竭的小鼠,有近一半仍然存活,证明了转化型肝脏细胞具有体内功能。据悉,该项研究尚处于动物实验阶段,应用于临床,还需要相当长时间优化。

《自然》杂志的编委和评审专家高度评价此项工作的开创性意义,他们认为研究中所建立的技术体系,作为一项重大突破,对同领域的研究工作具有指导意义。

除了在细胞移植的临床应用前景外,转化型肝脏细胞在制药工业有关的药物代谢和药物毒理研究中,在基础医学和临床医学中对肝脏疾病机理研究也具有广泛的应用前景。目前已申请了相关专利,并有意投入开发利用,争取将实验室的基础研究成果转化为真正的科研生产力,回报社会,造福人类。这一工作得到了科技部、国家自然科学基金委、中国科学院的经费支持。(来源:科技日报 齐宏彪 王春)



(6.合.彩).足球.篮球...各类投注开户下注

第一投注.现金网:招代理年薪10万以上:6668.cc
已有 1 人评分现金 收起 理由
bigben446 + 30 原创内容

总评分: 现金 + 30   查看全部评分

Rank: 8Rank: 8

现金
62111 元 
精华
26 
帖子
30441 
注册时间
2009-10-5 
最后登录
2022-12-28 

才高八斗

2
发表于 2011-5-13 16:44 |只看该作者
letmein2005 发表于 2011-5-13 16:20
科学家首次获得转化型肝脏细胞
转化型肝脏细胞移植肝衰竭小鼠一半存活

这项研究得到了国际的关注和好评.

The Scientist
Stem cells may mend liver damage

Researchers have found a way to reprogram cells from mouse tails to behave like mature liver cells, which appear to be able to repair damaged livers, according to a study published this week in Nature. The paper is proof of the concept that reprogrammed cells can skip the pluripotency stage and still hold therapeutic value. Cell biologist Lijian Hui of the Shanghai Institute for Biological Sciences in China and his colleagues expressed three proteins, and suppressed one, to reprogram fibroblasts from mouse tails into liver-like cells, which they then transplanted into mutant mice that were unable to detoxify certain metabolic intermediates. Five of the 12 animals that received the engineered cells survived, while all control animals died.

"It's really exciting," Paul Gadue, a stem-cell biologist at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania who was not involved in the study, told Nature. "If this work could be translated to humans, it could be very powerful."


Read more: News in a nutshell - The Scientist - Magazine of the Life Sciences http://www.the-scientist.com/news/display/58170/#ixzz1MDg6x8u5



已有 1 人评分现金 收起 理由
bigben446 + 30 原创内容

总评分: 现金 + 30   查看全部评分

Rank: 4

现金
437 元 
精华
帖子
332 
注册时间
2011-4-13 
最后登录
2012-6-17 
3
发表于 2011-5-13 21:59 |只看该作者
远水......
没有大米会饿,没有拉米会晕;没有道德遭骂,没有阿德遭灭;没有承诺无为,没有替诺无生。

Rank: 8Rank: 8

现金
62111 元 
精华
26 
帖子
30441 
注册时间
2009-10-5 
最后登录
2022-12-28 

才高八斗

4
发表于 2011-5-14 10:47 |只看该作者
Reprogrammed Cells Repair Damaged Livers                               

Proof-of-principle study could point the way to averting the need for liver transplants.

                               

                                         |                                        May 11, 2011                                                                       

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

By Heidi Ledford of Nature magazine

Cells taken from the tips of mouse tails and genetically reprogrammed to mimic mature liver cells can repair damaged livers.

The ultimate goal of such studies is to use the same technique to reprogram human cells, reducing the need for liver transplants in patients with end-stage liver disease. Although the study in mice, published online today in Nature, is still far removed from the clinic, it does provide an important proof of concept: it is thought to be the first time that cells reprogrammed using a process called transdifferentiation - produced without passing through a stem-cell stage - have been shown to fix a damaged organ.

"It's really exciting," says Paul Gadue, a stem-cell biologist at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania who was not involved in the study. "If this work could be translated to humans, it could be very powerful."

New identity

Transdifferentiation has been used to generate blood cells, cardiac muscle cells and neurons from adult cells called fibroblasts. But liver cells pose a particular challenge to cellular reprogrammers, says Ira Fox, a pediatric transplant surgeon and stem-cell researcher at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania, who was also not involved in the work.

Mature liver cells have many functions, from breaking down toxins to producing many of the body's proteins. "There's no such thing as an artificial liver," says Fox. "It's an incredibly complex organ and it's basically impossible to replace."

Cell biologist Lijian Hui of the Shanghai Institute for Biological Sciences in China and his team tackled this problem by sifting through 14 proteins known to be important for activating genes in liver cells. The expression of three such proteins and the suppression of another called p19 was all that it took to persuade fibroblasts isolated from mouse tails to behave like liver cells.

The researchers then took these cells and transplanted them into mice lacking a gene needed to detoxify certain metabolic intermediates. Control animals that did not receive the transplants died within weeks, but 5 of the 12 animals that received the engineered cells survived.

The cells created by Hui's team were not exact replicas of mature liver cells. The expression of several genes, including at least one involved in breaking down toxins, differed between normal liver cells and Hui's reprogrammed cells. Hui believes that the transplants saved only some of the mice because the cells did not fully mimic mature liver cells.

"The cells aren't perfect," concedes Gadue, but he notes that researchers have struggled with liver cells derived from other methods as well.

Tough target

Those alternative methods include generating liver cells from adult skin cells by first converting them into a type of stem cell called an induced pluripotent stem cell, and then coaxing those stem cells into behaving like liver cells. A paper published today in Science Translational Medicine reports that human cells derived in this way repaired damaged mouse livers just as well as normal human liver cells.

Researchers have long struggled to get such cells to function like fully fledged liver cells, says Gadue. Although liver cells are well known for their ability to proliferate in the body -- slice out two-thirds of a liver and the remaining third will quickly regenerate a normal organ - the cells do not fare well in laboratory cultures. "It is possible that since we're culturing them in an inappropriate environment, they may be losing their function," says Gadue.

Liver cells derived directly from stem cells may also behave more like fetal liver cells than adult liver cells, he notes. Transdifferentiation could, in theory, produce more mature cells.

Hui says that the next step for his team will be to translate the work to human cells. To do this, the researchers may have to find a way around the need to suppress the p19 protein. Although Hui saw no signs of tumors in his mice, p19 suppresses tumors, and eliminating it could promote cancer.

"This current method is not the ultimate solution for the clinic," says Fox. "But it's an important proof of principle."

This article is reproduced with permission from the magazine Nature. The article was first published on May 11, 2011.

                                                                               
已有 1 人评分现金 收起 理由
IC + 4

总评分: 现金 + 4   查看全部评分

Rank: 10Rank: 10Rank: 10

现金
32534 元 
精华
25 
帖子
19421 
注册时间
2002-6-11 
最后登录
2013-3-23 

版主勋章 勤于助新 携手同心 文思泉涌 锄草勋章

5
发表于 2011-5-14 11:30 |只看该作者
我过去看过,将干细胞放入肝组织,将自动转化成肝脏细胞。这种转化是自动发生的,不需要诱导。

http://www.bioon.com/Article/clinic03/121440.shtml


而且,肝细胞零散地放着,是不能自动分化生长的。即团成一团的。必须按照线性排列成特殊形状,才能
所以,将干细胞注入肝组织,可以转化成肝细胞。但这种肝细胞因为不在正确的位置,所以是无法分裂增殖的。
而且在体外的肝细胞,如果不用真正的肝脏做支架,也是无法体外培养的。

http://www.mittrchinese.com/single.php?p=3999

这种方法,必须找一个真正的肝脏,然后将所有细胞除去,只剩下结缔组织支架,然后将人工培养的肝细胞放到正确的位置,然后肝细胞才能生长。没有正确的支架,肝细胞不会分裂增殖。显然这种方法很难应用。
未成小隐聊中隐,可得长闲胜暂闲。
我本无家更安往,故乡无此好湖山。

Rank: 4

现金
159 元 
精华
帖子
91 
注册时间
2010-1-25 
最后登录
2012-5-27 
6
发表于 2011-5-16 09:52 |只看该作者
‹ 上一主题|下一主题
你需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

肝胆相照论坛

GMT+8, 2024-5-17 00:09 , Processed in 0.015232 second(s), 12 queries , Gzip On.

Powered by Discuz! X1.5

© 2001-2010 Comsenz Inc.