Monday, February 15, 2010

New study suggests stem cells sabotage their own DNA to produce new tissues

Source: Ottawa Hospital Research Institute
Date: February 15, 2010

Summary:

A new study from the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI) and the University of Ottawa suggests that stem cells intentionally break their own DNA as a way of regulating tissue development. The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), could dramatically change how researchers think about tissue development, stem cells and cancer.

The discovery has important implications for a number of areas. It could help researchers develop better ways to activate stem cells, so that they can produce new tissues for therapeutic purposes. It also suggests that DNA mutations, which can contribute to a variety of diseases, may initially occur as a result of a normal cellular process. And it has implications for researchers developing therapies that inhibit programmed cell death, suggesting that such therapies may also inhibit normal tissue development.