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Results 51 - 60 of 66 for stem cells. (4.25 seconds)
  • Stem cells police themselves to reduce scarring

    Stem cells produce a decoy protein to attenuate growth signals. Artificially regulating this pathway might help keep muscles supple in muscular dystrophy or during normal aging, researchers hope.

  • Canine cancer immunotherapy

    The work extends research by Stanford scientists who found that blocking CD47 might be useful in treating human cancer.

  • Paving the way for gene therapy

    Using the CRISPR gene-editing technique in stem cells, Stanford researchers repaired the gene that causes sickle cell disease, and the mended stem cells were successfully transplanted into mice.

  • Fat cell-maturation hormone found

    Mature fat cells produce a hormone that regulates the differentiation of nearby stem cells in response to glucocorticoid hormones and high-fat diets, Stanford researchers have found.

  • Dietary approach to depleting stem cells

    A new study shows that a diet deficient in valine effectively depleted the blood stem cells in mice and made it possible to perform a blood stem cell transplantation on them.

  • Cell, gene medicine lab opens

    Making cell- or virus-based therapies for use in humans requires a rigid set of quality-control standards outlined by the Food and Drug Administration. A new Stanford facility will allow promising new therapies to be tested in the clinic.

  • A safer way for bone marrow transplants

    Scientists have devised a way to destroy blood stem cells in mice without using chemotherapy or radiotherapy, both of which have toxic side effects.

  • Antibodies could counter atherosclerosis

    A biological drug could be used to combat cardiovascular disease by targeting not mere risk factors such as high cholesterol or high blood pressure, but the actual lesions bearing direct responsibility: atherosclerotic plaques.

  • Coaxing stem cells to quickly specialize

    A new study shows that combining positive and negative signals can quickly and efficiently steer stem cells down complex developmental pathways to become specialized tissues that could be used in the clinic.

  • Stem-cell therapy for stroke trial successful

    People disabled by a stroke demonstrated substantial recovery long after the event when modified adult stem cells were injected into their brains.