Overview Of Stem Cells Stem cells are cells found in most, if not all, multi-cellular organisms They have the ability to renew themselves through mitotic cell division and differentiating into a diverse range of specialized cell types. The two broad types are embryonic and adult stem cells. first founded by Ernest A. McCulloch and James E. Till
Stem Cell Timeline 1954 – John Enders received a Nobel prize in Medicine for growing polio virus in human embryonic kidney cells Leroy Stevens publishes his work on mouse teratocarcinomas and was the first person to identify the pluripotent tendencies of stem cells Beatrice Mintz and Karl Illmensee demonstrate that ES cells can give rise to organisms, not just teratomas Martin Evans successfully cultured pluripotent mouse ES ells from inner cell masses of late blastocysts Ian Wilmut of the Roslin Institute and his colleagues clone the first mammal using the somatic nuclear transfer technique. We know her as Dolly James Thomson (University of Wisconsin-Madison) isolated cells from the inner cell mass of the early embryo, and developed the first human embryonic stem cell lines.
Timeline Cont Martin Pera and colleagues derive human embryonic stem cells lines using human blastocysts. They also demonstrate that these ES cells are capable of differentiating into neuronal progenitor cells A Colorado couple creates a test-tube baby who was genetically screened and selected in the hope he could save the life of his 6-year-old sister Researchers announce that they have cloned human embryos using somatic nuclear transfer and parthenogenesis and hope to use these embryos to derive stem cell lines for therapeutic cloning purposes research group of Harvard Medical School announce untreated mouse ES cells can become dopamine-producing neurons in the brains of rats and reduce Parkinson-like symptoms in the animals by about 40% Woo Suk Hwang and Moon publish that they are the first to clone a human embryo using SCNT from a female cumulus cell and have it reach the cell stage.