Scientists Unexpectedly Discover Stress-Resistant Stem Cells in Adipose Tissue

The new pluripotent cells could prove a boon to regenerative medicine.

Written byUniversity of California - Los Angeles
| 3 min read
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The new pluripotent cells could prove a boon to regenerative medicine

Researchers from the UCLA Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology have isolated a new population of primitive, stress-resistant human pluripotent stem cells that are easily derived from fat tissue and are able to differentiate into virtually every cell type in the human body without genetic modification.

The cells, called multi-lineage stress-enduring stem cells from adipose tissue (Muse-AT), were discovered by "scientific accident" when a piece of equipment failed in the laboratory, killing all the stem cells in an experiment except the Muse-AT cells.

The UCLA team further discovered that not only are Muse-AT cells able to survive severe stress, they may even be activated by it, said Gregorio Chazenbalk, an associate researcher with UCLA Obstetrics and Gynecology and the senior author of the research.

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