Biologists Discover Solution to Problem Limiting Development of Human Stem Cell Therapies

Biologists at UC San Diego have discovered an effective strategy that could prevent the human immune system from rejecting the grafts derived from human embryonic stem cells, a major problem now limiting the development of human stem cell therapies. Their discovery may also provide scientists with a better understanding of how tumors evade the human immune system when they spread throughout the body.

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The achievement, published in a paper in this week’s early online edition of the journal Cell Stem Cell by a collaboration that included scientists from China, was enabled by the development of “humanized” laboratory mice that contained a functional human immune system capable of mounting a vigorous immune rejection of foreign cells derived from human embryonic stem cells.

Because human embryonic stem cells are different from our own body’s cells, or “allogenic,” a normally functioning human immune system will attack these foreign cells. One way to reduce the body’s “allogenic immune response” is to suppress the immune system with immunosuppressant drugs.

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