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Stem Cell and Gene-Based Therapy: Frontiers in Regenerative Medicine

Alexander Battler Jonathan Leor

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Cardiology; Hematology; Dermatology; Neurology; Ophthalmology; Nephrology

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-85233-979-1

ISBN electrónico

978-1-84628-142-6

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag London 2006

Tabla de contenidos

Basic to Clinical Cartilage Engineering: Past, Present, and Future Discussions

Mats Brittberg; Tommi Tallheden; Anders H. Lindahl

An analysis of the literature provides no evidence so far for regular regeneration of hyaline cartilage in animal experiments and still today’s treatments for cartilage resurfacing are less than satisfactory, and rarely restore full function or return the tissue to its native normal state. The rapidly growing field of tissue engineering holds great promise for the generation of functional cartilage tissue substitutes. Cell biologists, engineers, and surgeons work closely together with combined knowledge of using biocompatible, biomimetic, biomechanical suitable scaffolds seeded with chondrogenic cells and loaded with bioactive molecules that promote time-relapsed cellular differentiation and/or maturation.

Section 3 - Musculoskeletal | Pp. 169-178

Cartilage

Rocky S. Tuan; Faye H. Chen

Neural precursor cells that reside in the adult brain, a potential source of myelin-forming cells, do not produce effective remyelination in MS. The transplantation of exogenous cells, as an alternative source of remyelinating cells, has been pursued as a very active research area over the last decade and remarkable progress has been obtained. New sources of myelinating cells were characterized and different transplantation strategies have been proposed. Better understanding of the pros and cons of using each of the various remyelinating cell types, of the different routes of cell delivery, and of methods for cell tracking, form the basis for designing cell transplantation strategies in the clinic. Better understanding of the process of remyelination and insights into the mechanism of action of transplanted cells are still needed to optimize cell therapy in demyelinating diseases.

Section 3 - Musculoskeletal | Pp. 179-193

Bone Regeneration

A.H. Reddi

XP is a social activity as well as a technical activity. The social side of XP is emphasized typically in the values and principles which underlie the technical practices. However, the fieldwork studies we have carried out with mature XP teams have shown that the technical practices themselves are also intensely social: they have social dimensions that arise from and have consequences for the XP approach. In this paper, we report on elements of XP practice that show the social side of several XP practices, including test-first development, simple design, refactoring and on-site customer. We also illustrate the social side of the practices in combination through a thematic view of progress.

Section 3 - Musculoskeletal | Pp. 195-201

Osteoarthritis and Mesenchymal Cells — The Prospects for Repair of the Disease by Cell Transplantation and Tissue Engineering

Dror Robinson

The derivation of the hESC lines and the resulting cardiomyocyte differentiation system may bring a unique value to several basic and applied research fields. Research based on the cells may help to elucidate the mechanisms involved in early human cardiac lineage commitment, differentiation, and maturation. Moreover, this research may promote the discovery of novel growth and transcriptional factors using gene trapping techniques, functional genomics, and proteomics as well as providing a novel in vitro model for drug development and testing. Finally, the ability to generate, in vitro for the first time, human cardiac tissue provides an exciting and promising cell source for the emerging discipline of regenerative medicine and myocardial repair.

Section 3 - Musculoskeletal | Pp. 203-206

Progenitor Cell Therapy for Kidney Regeneration

Benjamin Dekel; Yair Reisner

The derivation of the hESC lines and the resulting cardiomyocyte differentiation system may bring a unique value to several basic and applied research fields. Research based on the cells may help to elucidate the mechanisms involved in early human cardiac lineage commitment, differentiation, and maturation. Moreover, this research may promote the discovery of novel growth and transcriptional factors using gene trapping techniques, functional genomics, and proteomics as well as providing a novel in vitro model for drug development and testing. Finally, the ability to generate, in vitro for the first time, human cardiac tissue provides an exciting and promising cell source for the emerging discipline of regenerative medicine and myocardial repair.

Section 4 - Kidney | Pp. 209-223

Tissue Engineering — The Bladder

Anthony Atala

Regenerative medicine efforts are currently being undertaken for every type of tissue and organ, including the bladder, within the urinary system. Most of the effort expended to engineer bladder tissue has occurred within the last decade. Personnel who have mastered the techniques of cell harvest, culture, and expansion as well as polymer design are essential for the successful application of this technology. Various applications of engineered bladder tissues are at different stages of development, with some already being used clinically, a few in preclinical trials, and some in the discovery stage. Recent progress suggests that engineered bladder tissues may have an expanded clinical applicability in the future.

Section 4 - Kidney | Pp. 225-231

Neuroprotection in Ophthalmology: A Review

Yaniv Barkana; Michael Belkin

The ability to engineer or regenerate lost myocardial tissue caused by injury, aging, disease, or genetic abnormality holds great promise. The vision is to generate significant mass of functional heart muscle tissue. However, the area of myocardial tissue engineering still faces significant difficulties. Scientists are still searching for cell types other than cardiomyocytes. Novel approaches are warranted for material processing to create bioactive scaffolds, which would allow composition of the evolving myocardial structure. There is a need for development of strategies to promote vascularization and/or innervations within engineered myocardial tissue. Other important goals include achievement of immunologic tolerance for engineered constructs and increased understanding of the basic principles governing tissue formation, function, and failure, including the assembly of multiple cell types and biomaterials into multidimensional structures that mimic the architecture and function of native myocardial tissue.

In addition to laboratory-grown myocardial tissue, more research is warranted in the area of cardiac self-repair and regenerating functional myocardium in situ. If successful, these strategies could be used for surgical repair of the infarcted myocardium or congenital cardiac defects and would have a dramatic impact on the future of cardiovascular medicine and public health.

Section 5 - Eye | Pp. 237-249

Autoimmunity for Central Nervous System Maintenance, Regeneration, and Renewal: Development of a T Cell-Based Vaccination Against Neurodegeneration

Michal Schwartz; Jonathan Kipnis

Regenerative medicine efforts are currently being undertaken for every type of tissue and organ, including the bladder, within the urinary system. Most of the effort expended to engineer bladder tissue has occurred within the last decade. Personnel who have mastered the techniques of cell harvest, culture, and expansion as well as polymer design are essential for the successful application of this technology. Various applications of engineered bladder tissues are at different stages of development, with some already being used clinically, a few in preclinical trials, and some in the discovery stage. Recent progress suggests that engineered bladder tissues may have an expanded clinical applicability in the future.

Section 5 - Eye | Pp. 251-257

Retinal Repair by Stem Cell Transplantation

Jeffrey H. Stern; Sally Temple; Soma De

The clinical need for therapeutic approach aimed to alleviate symptoms in “no option” patients with coronary artery disease is growing. The negative results of several phase II studies raise concerns regarding the potential of the single growth factor approach. Administration of BM cells and peripheral blood-derived mononuclear and progenitor cells is a novel therapeutic strategy derived from the hypothesis that meaningful therapeutic angiogenesis can be achieved by local delivery of cells capable of secreting multiple growth factors and cytokines in a timely, coordinated manner. These cells may also have the potential to differentiate into a variety of vascular cells. Results obtained from multiple, small phase I studies suggest safety and feasibility of this approach. Cell delivery seems also to improved myocardial perfusion and function. This encouraging initial experience together with new data derived from novel animal studies and added knowledge at the molecular and cellular levels widen the horizons for this novel strategy.

Section 5 - Eye | Pp. 259-280

Induction of Ocular Surface Regeneration

Irina S. Barequet

XP is a social activity as well as a technical activity. The social side of XP is emphasized typically in the values and principles which underlie the technical practices. However, the fieldwork studies we have carried out with mature XP teams have shown that the technical practices themselves are also intensely social: they have social dimensions that arise from and have consequences for the XP approach. In this paper, we report on elements of XP practice that show the social side of several XP practices, including test-first development, simple design, refactoring and on-site customer. We also illustrate the social side of the practices in combination through a thematic view of progress.

Section 5 - Eye | Pp. 281-296