Cancer cells transfer mitochondria through nanotubes to healthy neighboring cells, turning them into tumor-supporting accomplices, a new study shows.
ExtremeTech on MSN
Scientists Catch Cancer Cells Reprogramming Neighbors Into Their Minions
These injected mitochondria change the overall complex of genes expressed in the recipient cells. They also induce the release of metabolites useful to cancers. When the researchers co-injected cancer ...
New research shows it's possible to reprogram skin cells into eggs that can be fertilized in the lab, though it's just a proof of concept for now.
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Tissue-mimicking hydrogels drive cell reprogramming via matrix remodeling
The mechanical properties of tissue matrix are crucial for maintaining cell health and function. With aging, tissue matrix loses its mechanical integrity and exhibits altered biophysical properties, ...
ExtremeTech on MSN
Scientists Successfully Use Skins Cells to Make Human Eggs
Since we can't get an unending supply of eggs naturally, scientists have long been interested in creating a synthetic pathway to new egg cells. After all, biologists can turn skin cells into all kinds ...
Free Malaysia Today on MSN
Human skin cells turned into fertilisable eggs for first time
While the technology is years away from becoming viable, this breakthrough potentially paves the way for infertile people to have children.
The discovery positions IGF2BP3 as a "master switch" in leukaemia, linking metabolism and RNA regulation, processes long thought to operate independently. Understanding this connection could pave the ...
3don MSN
OHSU researchers create human eggs from skin cells, pointing to new frontier in fertility treatment
Scientists describe the technique as an early proof of concept and say it could take at least a decade of further research before clinical translation.
A study published in Nature Communications looks at reprogramming human skin cells to create functional egg cells. Prof Roger Sturmey, Professor of Reproductive Medicine, University of Hull, said: ...
More work needs to be done to create viable human embryos, but the method might someday be used in IVF to help infertile people and male couples.
A reproductive medicine professor described the work as an “exciting proof of concept” that may change approaches to infertility.
Scientists have developed functional eggs from ordinary human skin cells, a proof of concept that could open up new ways to treat infertility.
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