PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Brazilian researchers find human menstrual blood-derived cells 'feed' embryonic stem cells

Technique preserves the undifferentiated nature of hESCs destined for transplantation

2014-05-28
(Press-News.org) Tampa, Fla. (May 28, 2014) – To be suitable for medical transplantation, one idea is that human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) need to remain "undifferentiated" i.e. they are not changing into other cell types. In determining the best way to culture hESCs so that they remain undifferentiated and also grow, proliferate and survive, researchers have used blood cell "feeder-layer" cultures using animal-derived feeder cells, often from mice (mouse embryonic fibroblasts [MEFs]). This approach has, however, been associated with a variety of contamination problems, including pathogen and viral transmission.

To avoid contamination problems, a Brazilian research team has investigated the use of human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal cells (MBMCs) as feeder layers and found that "MBMCs can replace animal-derived feeder systems in human embryonic stem cell culture systems and support their growth in an undifferentiated stage."

The study will be published in a future issue of Cell Medicine, but is currently freely available on-line as an unedited early e-pub at: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/cm/pre-prints/content-CM1019silvadosSantos.

"Human embryonic stem cells present a continuous proliferation in an undifferentiated state, resulting in an unlimited amount of cells with the potential to differentiate toward any type of cell in the human body," said study corresponding author Dr. Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg of the Instituto de Biofisica Carlos Chagas Filho, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro. "These characteristics make hESCs good candidates for cell based therapies."

Feeder-layers for hESCs comprised of MEFs have been efficiently used for decades but, because of the clinical drawbacks, the authors subsequently experimented with human menstrual blood cells as a potential replacement for animal-derived feeder-layers, not only for negating the contamination issues, but also because human menstrual blood is so accessible. MBMCs are without ethical encumbrances and shortages, nor are they difficult to access - a problem with other human cells, such as umbilical cord blood cells, adult bone marrow cells or placenta cells.

"Menstrual blood is derived from uterine tissues," explained the researchers. "These cells are widely available 12 times a year from women of child-bearing age. The cells are easily obtained, possess the capability of long-term proliferation and are clinically compatible with hESCs-derived cells."

The researchers found that their culture system using MBMCs as a feeder-layer for hESCs are the "closest and more suitable alternative to animal-free conditions for growing hESCs" and a "good candidate for large-expansion of cells for clinical application." They also found no difference in growth factor expression when comparing the use of growth factors in both the standard feeder system using animal cells and the feeder system they tested using hESCs.

"It is also noteworthy to highlight that our group reported the rapid and efficient generation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from MBMCs, indicating that these cells can be used as a model to study patient-specific disease and that in the future they might be used in clinical settings."

"This study provides a new means of culturing hESCs without potential xenocontamination and after further study to confirm that there is no contamination of the ESCs with the feeder cells, this could prove to be a viable way to culture ESCs for clinical purposes" said Dr. Maria C. O. Rodrigues, at the Ribeirão Preto School of Medicine, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil and section editor for Cell Medicine.

INFORMATION: Citation: Silva dos Santos, D.; Coelho de Oliveira, V. C.; Asensi, K. D.; Vairo, L.; Carvalho, A. B.; Campos de Carvalho, A. C.; Goldenberg, R. C. dos S. Human Menstrual Blood Derived Mesenchymal Cells As New Human Feederlayer System For Human Embryonic Stem Cells. Cell Med. Appeared or available online March 3, 2014. Contact: Dr. Regina Coeli dos Santos Goldenberg, Instituto de Biofisica Carlos Chagas Filho, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Av Carlos Chagas Filho 373 Bloco G-Sala G2-053, Rio de Janeiro, RJ 21941-902, Brazil Tel: +55 21 2562 6559 Email: rcoeli@biof.ufrj.br

The editorial offices for CELL MEDICINE are at the Center of Excellence for Aging and Brain Repair, College of Medicine, the University of South Florida. Contact, David Eve, PhD. at cellmedicinect@gmail.com

News Release by Florida Science Communications http://www.sciencescribe.net END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Can Tai Chi slow the aging process?

2014-05-28
Putnam Valley, NY. (May 28, 2014) – Tai Chi, a traditional Chinese martial art and sport, has been found to be beneficial in raising the numbers of an important type of cell when three groups of young people were tested to discover the benefits of Tai Chi, brisk walking or no exercise. The group performing Tai Chi saw a rise in their cluster of differentiation 34 expressing (CD34+) cells, a stem cell important to a number of the body's functions and structures. The study was published in issue 23(4/5) of Cell Transplantation and is freely available on-line at: http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cog/ct/2014/00000023/F0020004/art00020. "To ...

Scientists control rapid re-wiring of brain circuits using patterned visual stimulation

2014-05-28
In a new study, published in this week's issue of the journal Science, researchers show for the first time how the brain re-wires and fine-tunes its connections differently depending on the relative timing of sensory stimuli. In most neuroscience textbooks today, there is a widely held model that explains how nerve circuits might refine their connectivity based on patterned firing of brain cells, but it has not previously been directly observed in real time. This "Hebbian Theory", named after the McGill University psychologist Donald Olding Hebb who first proposed it in ...

Acute concern for health, environment highlighted at UN-backed E-waste Academy in Latin America

Acute concern for health, environment highlighted at UN-backed E-waste Academy in Latin America
2014-05-28
Acute concerns about e-waste management in developing countries were highlighted in expert presentations at a recent E-waste Academy for Managers (EWAM) in El Salvador organized by UN University Institute for the Advanced Study of Sustainability (UNU-IAS) hosted Step (Solving the E-Waste Program) Initiative. The week-long Academy ended April 4 was the second in a series inaugurated in Ghana in 2012. By sharing insights on "urban mining" and fostering international linkages and collaboration, the academies for e-waste managers, along with complementary events for e-waste-related ...

Cats found to eat more in the winter

2014-05-28
Cats eat more during the winter and owners should give their pet more food during this time, University of Liverpool research has found. Researchers from the University's School of Veterinary Science, in collaboration with colleagues at the Royal Canin Research Centre in France, spent four years monitoring how much cats chose to eat, and found that food intake increased in colder months and decreased during the summer. The 38 cats studied had a microchip on their collar which allowed them to take as much food as they wanted from a dispenser which only opened for them. ...

Surface physics: Leaving the islands

2014-05-28
In a recent study involving researchers from Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich, the desorption of oxygen molecules from a silver surface was successfully visualized for the first time. The effects account for the shortcomings of conventional models of desorption. In a recent study involving LMU researchers, the desorption of oxygen molecules from a silver surface was successfully visualized for the first time. The effects account for the shortcomings of conventional models of desorption. In heterogeneous catalytic reactions, which take place at the boundary ...

Encounters at coffee shops help corporate communicators influence company 'chiefs'

2014-05-28
Lobbying senior business executives informally — whether in hallways or after work at Starbucks and fitness centers — is a savvy way for corporate communicators to perform their jobs successfully, according to a Baylor University study. While other scholars have touted being a member of the "C-suite" as the ideal for public relations and corporate communicators, the Baylor study of four corporations — three ranked as Fortune 500 companies — showed that being an influential insider does not always require being in the board room with the "chiefs," said Marlene Neill, Ph.D., ...

Panama saves whales and protects world trade

Panama saves whales and protects world trade
2014-05-28
The Republic of Panama's proposal to implement four Traffic Separation Schemes for commercial vessels entering and exiting the Panama Canal and ports was approved unanimously by the International Maritime Organization in London, May 23. Based on studies by Smithsonian marine ecologist Hector Guzman, the new shipping lanes are positioned to minimize overlap between shipping routes and humpback whale migration routes and reduce vessel speed four months a year at the peak of the whale overwintering season. Several cetacean species move through the tropical waters near the ...

Dialysis patients' anxiety and depression linked to physical impairments

Dialysis patients anxiety and depression  linked to physical impairments
2014-05-28
LOS ANGELES – (May 28, 2014) – With the rate of chronic kidney disease on the rise among older Americans, researchers seeking to improve patients' quality of life studied a group of adults undergoing hemodialysis and found their higher rates of depression and anxiety could be associated with their impaired physical exercise capability and reduced daily physical activity, according a new study published online by the Journal of Renal Nutrition. The researchers studied 72 relatively healthy maintenance hemodialysis patients and compared them to 39 healthy adults who were ...

Dads who do chores bolster daughters' aspirations

2014-05-28
Fathers who help with household chores are more likely to raise daughters who aspire to less traditional, and potentially higher paying, careers. So finds a new study that suggests how parents share dishes, laundry and other domestic duties plays a key role in shaping the gender attitudes and aspirations of their children, especially daughters. While mothers' gender and work equality beliefs were key factors in predicting kids' attitudes toward gender, the strongest predictor of daughters' own professional ambitions was their fathers' approach to household chores. ...

Sight for sore eyes: Augmented reality without the discomfort

Sight for sore eyes: Augmented reality without the discomfort
2014-05-28
WASHINGTON, May 28—Augmented reality is increasingly becoming… well … a reality. Smartphone apps can point out restaurants as you scan the street with your phone camera or even identify constellations when you point your phone at the night sky. And goggle-like devices—akin to Google Glass—that you wear on your head can superimpose computer-generated images onto your direct view of the physical world. But one major limitation of this kind of augmented reality (AR) technology is that moving back and forth between a 2-D image on the screen and a 3-D world in front of you ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Data scarcity challenges identification of endocrine disruptors

A significant portion of the world’s population continues to trust vaccines, says survey in 23 countries

Clumps of this molecule inhibit strep’s DNA-cleaving enzymes

Cars as particles

Let widgeongrass be a weed in the seagrass yard -- making seagrass restoration more resistant to rising temperatures using generalist grasses

Group sales incentives boost weak brand sales, study finds

The double-fanged adolescence of saber-toothed cats

COVID-19-induced financial hardships reveal mental health struggles

Healthy lifestyle may offset effects of life-shortening genes by 60%+

Frequent teen vaping might boost risk of toxic lead and uranium exposure

Fentanyl inhalation may cause potentially irreversible brain damage, warn doctors

OHSU patient is world’s first documented case of brain disease from fentanyl inhalation

Microarray patches safe and effective for vaccinating children, trial shows

Montana State scientists’ research on RNA editing illuminates possible lifesaving treatments for genetic diseases

UC Irvine astronomers’ simulations support dark matter theory

Rensselaer researcher publishes groundbreaking study on labor market discrimination against transgender people

What's new in transportation data at PSU?

Ten-minute breath test to monitor antibiotic concentrations

Antimicrobial resistance prevalence varies by age and sex in bloodstream infections in European hospitals

Pathogens, including multi-drug resistant “superbugs”, found on floors, ceilings and door handles of hospital toilets, UK study finds

Sour Patch adults: 1 in 8 grown-ups love extreme tartness, study shows

Vineyard Cares Business of the Year presented to Huntsman Cancer Institute

Polyamorous youth report facing stigma, heightened levels of depression

Competition from “skinny label” generics saved Medicare billions

Xavier Ochsner College of Medicine announces founding dean and location in downtown New Orleans at Benson Tower

Three Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute faculty members honored by AAAS

STRONG STAR Consortium secures $17 million in DOD research funding for brain injuries, PTSD and more

Scientists harness the wind as a tool to move objects

Long snouts protect foxes when diving headfirst in snow

Laser imaging could offer early detection for at-risk artwork

[Press-News.org] Brazilian researchers find human menstrual blood-derived cells 'feed' embryonic stem cells
Technique preserves the undifferentiated nature of hESCs destined for transplantation