These findings suggest that IGFBP-6 could potentially be used to help guide skeletal muscle regeneration for use in stem cell therapies. “We plan on using mouse models with muscle injury to test ...
These stem cells are activated in response to muscle injury to regenerate damaged muscle tissue. Lack of muscle stem cell targeting limits the treatment of muscular dystrophies. Here, the authors ...
Stem cell research and regenerative medicine have emerged as pivotal fields in modern biomedical science, offering promising ...
1 Division of Sports Medicine, Department of Family Medicine, Sports Health And Performance Institute, The Ohio State University, Columbus,Ohio, USA 2 Stem Cell Research ... inflammation, regeneration ...
What is special about Platynereis dumerilii is that, unlike other species, regeneration in marine worms does not rely on existing stem cells. Instead, differentiated cells undergo what is known as ...
"By controlling and reshaping how stem cells differentiate and develop, it might allow us to grow better organs for transplantation or organoids for disease modeling and eventually utilize it to drive ...
A team of researchers led by Emory's Chunhui Xu recently found that heart muscle cells can grow and survive in the ...
Stem cell biology; regeneration; skeletal muscle regeneration and aging; skeletal muscle stem cells and gene therapy; growth factors and signal transduction; mouse molecular genetics; muscular ...
Studies in animals have shown that transplanted dental mesenchymal stem cells were able to regenerate the periodontium and dental pulp in vivo, thus indicating their huge potential for future cell ...
Dr. Kevin Watt, team leader of the Heart Regeneration and Disease ... who discovered that specialized cells could be reprogrammed back to immature stem cells, Watt and his collaborators have ...
Co-delivery of fibrin-laminin hydrogel with mesenchymal stem cell spheroids supports skeletal muscle regeneration following trauma. J Tissue Eng Regen Med. 2021 Dec;15(12):1131-1143. doi: 10.1002/term ...