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

Duke researchers engineer cartilage from pluripotent stem cells

2012-10-30
(Press-News.org) DURHAM, N.C. – A team of Duke Medicine researchers has engineered cartilage from induced pluripotent stem cells that were successfully grown and sorted for use in tissue repair and studies into cartilage injury and osteoarthritis.

The finding is reported online Oct. 29, 2012, in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and suggests that induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPSCs, may be a viable source of patient-specific articular cartilage tissue.

"This technique of creating induced pluripotent stem cells – an achievement honored with this year's Nobel Prize in medicine for Shimya Yamanaka of Kyoto University - is a way to take adult stem cells and convert them so they have the properties of embryonic stem cells," said Farshid Guilak, PhD, Laszlo Ormandy Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Duke and senior author of the study.

"Adult stems cells are limited in what they can do, and embryonic stem cells have ethical issues," Guilak said. "What this research shows in a mouse model is the ability to create an unlimited supply of stem cells that can turn into any type of tissue – in this case cartilage, which has no ability to regenerate by itself."

Articular cartilage is the shock absorber tissue in joints that makes it possible to walk, climb stairs, jump and perform daily activities without pain. But ordinary wear-and-tear or an injury can diminish its effectiveness and progress to osteoarthritis. Because articular cartilage has a poor capacity for repair, damage and osteoarthritis are leading causes of impairment in older people and often requires joint replacement.

In their study, the Duke researchers, led by Brian O. Diekman, PhD., a post-doctoral associate in orthopaedic surgery, aimed to apply recent technologies that have made iPSCs a promising alternative to other tissue engineering techniques, which use adult stem cells derived from the bone marrow or fat tissue.

One challenge the researchers sought to overcome was developing a uniformly differentiated population of chondrocytes, cells that produce collagen and maintain cartilage, while culling other types of cells that the powerful iPSCs could form.

To achieve that, the researchers induced chondrocyte differentiation in iPSCs derived from adult mouse fibroblasts by treating cultures with a growth medium. They also tailored the cells to express green fluorescent protein only when the cells successfully became chondrocytes. As the iPSCs differentiated, the chondrocyte cells that glowed with the green fluorescent protein were easily identified and sorted from the undesired cells.

The tailored cells also produced greater amounts of cartilage components, including collagen, and showed the characteristic stiffness of native cartilage, suggesting they would work well repairing cartilage defects in the body.

"This was a multi-step approach, with the initial differentiation, then sorting, and then proceeding to make the tissue," Diekman said. "What this shows is that iPSCs can be used to make high quality cartilage, either for replacement tissue or as a way to study disease and potential treatments."

Diekman and Guilak said the next phase of the research will be to use human iPSCs to test the cartilage-growing technique.

"The advantage of this technique is that we can grow a continuous supply of cartilage in a dish," Guilak said. "In addition to cell-based therapies, iPSC technology can also provide patient-specific cell and tissue models that could be used to screen for drugs to treat osteoarthritis, which right now does not have a cure or an effective therapy to inhibit cartilage loss."

###In addition to Guilak and Diekman, study authors include Nicolas Christoforou; Vincent P. Willard; Alex Sun; Johannah Sanchez-Adams; and Kam W. Leong.

The National Institutes of Health (AR50245, AR48852, AG15768, AR48182, Training Grant T32AI007217) and the Arthritis Foundation funded the study.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Smoke-free laws led quickly to fewer hospitalizations

2012-10-30
Smoke-free legislation was associated with substantially fewer hospitalizations and deaths from heart and respiratory diseases, according to research in the American Heart Association journal Circulation. Researchers reviewed 45 studies covering 33 smoke-free laws at the local and state levels around the United States and from countries as varied as Uruguay, New Zealand and Germany and found: Comprehensive smoke-free laws were associated with a rapid 15 percent decrease in heart attack hospitalizations and 16 percent decrease in stroke hospitalizations. Smoke-free ...

New study sheds light on how and when vision evolved

2012-10-30
The study, which used computer modelling to provide a detailed picture of how and when opsins evolved, sheds light on the origin of sight in animals, including humans. The evolutionary origins of vision remain hotly debated, partly due to inconsistent reports of phylogenetic relationships among the earliest opsin-possessing animals. Dr Davide Pisani of Bristol's School of Earth Sciences and colleagues at NUI Maynooth performed a computational analysis to test every hypothesis of opsin evolution proposed to date. The analysis incorporated all available genomic information ...

Mass extinction study provides lessons for modern world

Mass extinction study provides lessons for modern world
2012-10-30
The Cretaceous Period of Earth history ended with a mass extinction that wiped out numerous species, most famously the dinosaurs. A new study now finds that the structure of North American ecosystems made the extinction worse than it might have been. Researchers at the University of Chicago, the California Academy of Sciences and the Field Museum of Natural History will publish their findings Oct. 29 online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The mountain-sized asteroid that left the now-buried Chicxulub impact crater on the coast of Mexico's Yucatan ...

No more tears from tears

2012-10-30
BOSTON, MA—Commercial medical tapes on the market today are great at keeping medical devices attached to the skin, but often can do damage—such as skin tissue tearing—once it's time to remove them. A research team from Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) has invented a quick-release tape that has the strong adhesion properties of commercial medical tape, but without the ouch factor upon removal. The team was led by Jeffrey Karp, PhD, BWH Division of Biomedical Engineering, Department of Medicine, senior study author in collaboration with The Institute for Pediatric ...

Overweight, obesity in adolescents linked with increased risk for end-stage renal disease over time

2012-10-30
CHICAGO – Being overweight and obese during adolescence appears related to an increased risk of all-cause treated end-stage renal disease (ESRD) during a 25-year period, according to a report published Online First by Archives of Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication. Children and adolescents with high body mass index (BMI) often become obese adults, and obese adults are at risk for chronic conditions such as diabetes, which can mean future risk of chronic kidney disease and ESRD, according to the study background. Asaf Vivante, M.D., of the Israeli Defense ...

Decline in incidence of heart attacks appears associated with smoke-free workplace laws

2012-10-30
CHICAGO – A decline in the incidence of myocardial infarction (MI, heart attack) in one Minnesota county appears to be associated with the implementation of smoke-free workplace laws, according to a report published Online First by Archives of Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication. Exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) is associated with coronary heart disease (CHD) in nonsmokers, and research suggests that the cardiovascular effects of SHS are nearly as large as those with active smoking, according to the study background. Elimination of smoking in public places, ...

Smoking causes asthma in second generation offspring

2012-10-30
The dangers of smoking on smokers and their children are widely known but new research published in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Medicine demonstrates that nicotine exposure also causes asthma in the smoker's grandchildren. Asthma is a major public health problem. It is the most common chronic disease of childhood. While there are many factors which contribute to asthma maternal smoking during pregnancy is a well known, and avoidable, risk. During pregnancy nicotine can affect a developing foetus' lungs, predisposing the infant to childhood asthma. Researchers ...

Smoking and hyperactivity share common genetic risk factor

2012-10-30
[Family-based association study of ADHD and genes increasing the risk for smoking behaviours Online First doi 10.1136/archdischild-2012-301882] [Shared biological risks that influence brain and behaviour Online First doi 10.1136/archdischild-2012-302461] A variation of a particular gene may link the behaviours typical of childhood attention hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD for short, and those associated with smoking, suggests research published online in the Archives of Disease in Childhood. Childhood ADHD and subsequent smoking in adulthood frequently go hand in hand, ...

Overweight and smoking during pregnancy boost risk of overweight kids

2012-10-30
[Systematic review and meta-analyses of risk factors for childhood overweight identifiable during infancy Online First doi 10.1136/archdischild-2012-302263] Mums who carry too much weight and/or who smoke during pregnancy increase the risk of having overweight kids, indicates a systematic analysis of the available evidence published online in the Archives of Disease in Childhood. A high birth weight and rapid weight gain during the first year of life also increase the risk, indicates the study. The authors base their findings on a comprehensive review of the available ...

Oxidative stress and altered gene expression occurs in a metabolic liver disease model

2012-10-30
A team of researchers under the direction of Dr. Jeffrey Teckman in the Department of Pediatrics at St. Louis University, have demonstrated that oxidative stress occurs in a genetic model of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency. This is the most common genetic liver disorder in children and can lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in adults. Some cases may require liver transplantation. The report, published in the October 2012 issue of Experimental Biology and Medicine, suggests that treatment with antioxidants might be of therapeutic benefit for some individuals. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Truly autonomous AI is on the horizon

California’s marine protected areas boost fish populations across the state

Poachers’ social media posts reveal alarming extent of illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon

Examining the potential environmental effects of mining the world’s largest lithium deposit

Chicken ‘woody breast’ detection improved with advanced machine learning model

Around 1 in 5 UK medical students considers dropping out, study suggests

Poor childhood social and cognitive skills combo linked to teens’ poor exam results

Position menstrual cups carefully to avoid possible kidney problems, doctors urge

Yale scientists recode the genome for programmable synthetic proteins

MiR-128-3p mediates MRP2 internalization in estrogen-induced cholestasis through targeting PDZK1

Bleeding risk with apixaban and dabigatran similar to aspirin

MD Anderson Research Highlights for February 10, 2025

Ready (or not) for love? Your friends likely agree

Health care students and clinicians support integrated care education

Scientists from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution identify heat-resistant kelp strain

Rice-BCM research enables detection of hazardous chemicals in human placenta with unprecedented speed and precision

Researchers are driving the charge of zero emissions

USC-led study finds potential new drug target for Alzheimer’s disease

Why you need to subscribe to NFCR’s new podcast, “All Things Cancer”

Research pinpoints weakness in lung cancer’s defenses

New study highlights healthcare utilization shifts among Long COVID patients in Colorado after diagnosis

Majority of kids who die in mass shootings killed by family members, Stanford Medicine-led study shows

How perception may shape health safety-related assessments

Potential new strategy for relieving anxiety

Scientists develop corrosion-induced electrodes for biomass upgrading

Contemporary hormonal contraception and risk of venous thromboembolism

Victim-shooter relationships in mass shootings involving child victims

Health care company payouts favor shareholders, new research shows

Glucose-lowering medications and risk of COPD exacerbations in patients with type 2 diabetes

Low to moderate prenatal alcohol exposure and facial shape of children at ages 6 to 8

[Press-News.org] Duke researchers engineer cartilage from pluripotent stem cells