Curtailing embryonic stem cell research would also hurt iPS cell research, Stanford expert finds
STANFORD, Calif. — Any legislation that slows human embryonic stem cell research is likely to also seriously harm the study of induced pluripotent stem cells, according to a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine, the Mayo Clinic and the University of Michigan.
The finding strongly refutes the idea that embryonic stem cell research can be abandoned in favor of the less-controversial iPS cells, which are derived from adult human tissue.
"If federal funding stops for human embryonic stem cell research, it would have a serious negative impact ...