Title: Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine
1Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine
2Glow-in-the-dark dogs!
3What is stem cell research?
- Understand more about development, aging, disease
- Experimental model systems
- Prevent or treat diseases and injuries
- Cell-based therapies
- Pharmaceutical development
- Includes testing and drug delivery
-
4Trachea transplantationExample of adult stem
cell-based tissue regeneration
5Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - How did they make those dogs?
- Conclusion and future directions
6Conception in a dish
Day 1
In the IVF procedure, sperm and eggs interact
in a dish leading to insemination. They literally
swim up to the egg and burrow toward the
nucleus. The first one to get there wins, and all
others are blocked out. Male fertility issue
Sometimes sperm cannot latch onto and penetrate
the egg. They may choose to have
Intra(within)-Cytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI)
7Intra-Cytoplasmic Sperm Injection
8Intra-Cytoplasmic Sperm Injection
9Day 1
10Day 2
11Day 2
12Day 3
13Day 4
14Day 5
15At what point is this a fetus?
- Days 7-14 Uterine implantation
- Day 14 Three distinct layers begin to
form (no more pluripotent stem cells) - Days 14-21 Beginning of future nervous system
- Days 21-24 Beginning of future face, neck,
mouth, and nose - Weeks 3-8 Beginning of organ formation
- This picture is Week 5
- Week 5-8 Now its called a fetus
- (no consensus on a single timepoint)
16Embryonic Development Fish embryo
Keller et al. 2008
17Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
18Drawings
1
2
2.5
4
3
5
19Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
20Symmetric cell division
21Asymmetric cell division
- Self-renews
- Differentiates
Progenitor cell
Stem cell
Stem cell
22DIFFERENTIATION
DIFFERENTIATION
? SELF RENEWAL ?
23Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
24Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
25Embryonic stem cells in the dishWhat do
cultured ES cells look like?
26Fluorescent imaging of embryonicstem cell
colonies.
27Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
28Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
29Pluripotent
Multi- potent
Fully mature
30How do cells know what to become?
- All cells in a person have the same DNA
- Yet eye cells differ from nose cells
- Central dogma of biology
31Signals to Stem Cells
Little, et al. Chemical Reviews (2008).
32Factors known to affect stem cells
- Low stress levels
- Regular exercise
- Enriching experiences
- Learning new information
- Healthy diets rich in antioxidants
- Avoid excessive drinking
Helping you help yourself
33Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
34Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
35Experimental model systemHeart muscle cells
beating in a petri dish!
Videos by The Exploratorium
36Bone marrow transplantExample of adult stem
cell-based therapy
37Spinal cord injuryExample of embryonic stem
cell-based therapy
- Geron video http//www.geron.com/grnopc1clearance
/
38What are stem cell technologies?
- Cloning technologies
- Is human cloning a technology?
- What is different about cloning embryonic stem
cells? - Induced Pluripotent Stem cells
- New ways to potentially avoid the use of embryos
- Disease-specific stem cell lines created
- The promise and potential pitfalls of this
approach - When does research actually become technology?
39Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer (SCNT) Cloning of
embryonic stem cells
Udder cell
Egg cell
40Types of Cloning
41Induced Pluripotent Stem (iPS) CellsGenetically
engineering new stem cells
Skin cells
iPS cells
42Outline of Presentation
- Introduction to fertilization and embryonic
development - What makes stem cells unique?
- What do stem cells look like?
- What are the different types of stem cells?
- What are examples of stem cell research,
therapies, and technologies? - Conclusion and future directions
43Why do researchers want to use embryonic stem
cells along with other technologies?
- Pluripotent
- Expanded developmental potential allows them
- to be used in ways that adult stem cells cannot
- Can proliferate indefinitely in culture
- Easier to obtain than adult stem cells
44Science is discovering the unknown
- Stem cell field is still in its infancy
- Human embryonic stem cell research is a decade
old, adult stem cell research has 30-year head
start - Holds hope for curing or improving treatments for
- 70 diseases
- How can you help to shape the direction of this
field?
45Take our survey please!
Students https//www.surveymonkey.com/s/stemcell
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temcellteach2010