Medical Discovery NewsBridging the World of Medical Discovery and You

Recent Episodes

Synthetic Embryos

MP3 WAV

  • Synthetic embryos - those two words just don't seem to go together. And yet two separate studies accomplished this feat. Even though both studies worked with mouse cells, it's remarkable that the researchers began with single cells and then saw them grow into embryos.

    One group of researchers used stem cells that were manipulated to possess the ability to become any cell in a mouse body. From there, certain genes were switched on to lead some cells to form the mouse placenta. Other cells were treated to activate genes that would form either the yolk sac which provides nutrition to the embryo or then to form the embryo itself.

    In the other study, scientists started with cells destined to become the yolk sac, placenta or the embryo itself. Then the cells were continuously bathed in nutrients and encouraged to interact which is the key.

    As the cells grew, chemicals were exchanged between the different cells that signaled to one another to continue to develop into the cells they were meant to be. Over the more than eight days of development, recognizable features of the embryo developed.

    They grew a beating heart, formed a digestive tract, and began to assemble a central nervous system with a forebrain and a mid-brain. Incredible. After the eighth day, the embryos died. Researchers are looking into why. Perhaps it needed signaling from the mother's tissues that weren't in the lab environment. Still it's remarkable that the embryos highly resembled natural embryos from mouse mothers at that stage of development.

    What we learn from this could shed light on the very complex study of human fetal development.

More Information

Lab-made mouse embryos grew brains and beating hearts, just like the real thing
Scientists coaxed mouse stem cells to grow into synthetic embryos that began developing hearts and brains, just like the real thing.The lab-made embryos, crafted without any eggs or sperm and incubated in a device that resembles a fast-spinning Ferris wheel full of tiny glass vials, survived for 8.5 days. That's nearly half the length of a typical mouse pregnancy...

Post-gastrulation synthetic embryos generated ex utero from mouse naive ESCs
n vitro cultured stem cells with distinct developmental capacities can contribute to embryonic or extraembryonic tissues after microinjection into pre-implantation mammalian embryos. However, whether cultured stem cells can independently give rise to entire gastrulating embryo-like structures with embryonic and extraembryonic compartments remains unknown...

 Medicine...

Medicine is constantly advancing – that is a great thing about life in the 21st century. But it doesn’t just happen. Dedicated biomedical scientists are making discoveries that translate into those new medical advances.

Biomedical science is broad, encompassing everything from social science to microbiology, biochemistry, epidemiology, to structural biology and bioinformatics to name just a few areas. And, it can involve basic fundamental biology, the use of AI and chemistry to clinical studies that evaluate new medicines in patients.

No matter the research focus, the goal is always the same, to advance human health. It may take a few months, a few years or for fundamental science, a few decades. Few people make the connection that biomedical science is medicine and that biomedical scientists are working today on the medicine of tomorrow. Our weekly 500-word newspaper columns and 2-minute radio shows and podcasts provide insights into a broad range of biomedical science topics.

Medical Discovery News is dedicated to explaining discoveries in biomedical research and their promise for the future of medicine.

Podcasts

Alternatively, you can copy and paste the following web address (URL) into iTunes as a new subscription:
https://www.medicaldiscoverynews.com/shows/audio/mdnews.rss

You can also search and subscribe to "Medical Discovery News" in the podcast section of iTunes.

See all podcasts and radio stations

The www.medicaldiscoverynews.com web site and Medical Discovery News radio program (Program) are made possible by The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston (UTMB)as a community service and are intended to advance UTMB's mission of providing scholarly teaching, innovative scientific investigation, and state-of-the-art patient care in a learning environment to better the health of society and its commitment to the discovery of new innovative biomedical and health services knowledge leading to increasingly effective and accessible health care for the citizens of Texas.

All information provided on the web site and in the Program is for informational purposes only and is not intended for use as diagnosis or treatment of a health problem or as a substitute for consulting a licensed medical professional. Any information obtained by participating as a web site visitor or program listener is not intended to and should not be considered to constitute medical advice.

Thoughts and opinions expressed on the Program or on the website are those of the authors or guests and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of UTMB. The provision of links to other websites is not to be construed as written or implied sponsorship or endorsement of such websites by UTMB.

Please contact Dr. David Niesel or Dr. Norbert Herzog via email with any concerns, suggestions or comments.

All rights are reserved to information provided on the website or other information sources. No part of these programs can be reproduced stored in a retrieval system or transcribed in any form or by any means for personal or financial gained without the express written permission of Drs. Niesel and Dr. Herzog.