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Early Embryonic Development
Stem Cells
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Stem Cells – Part 1 The Information
What are they? Where do we get them from? Are they all the same? Why are we interested in them?
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How cells become specialised
Correct stimulus is given to unspecialised cells e.g. a chemical stimulus Some genes are switched on and become active; other genes are switched off m-RNA is made from the active genes m-RNA moves to the ribosomes; the ribosomes read the m-RNA and the appropriate protein is made The protein can permanently alter the structure and function of cells
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Stem Cells – What are they?
A type of source or master cell that can . . Undifferentiated cells Which keep dividing And can give rise to other cell types
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Potency How much stem cells differentiate is called potency
Stem cells vary in their potency: Totipotent: can give rise to any cell and so can produce a whole organism Pluripotent: potential to develop into many cell types but not all of them. Multipotent: cells retain the capacity to make a few types of cell Unipotent: make one type of cell e.g. Skin cells
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What are they and where are they found?
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Timeline of development
Day 1: Fertilisation – a zygote is formed Series of rapid cell divisions No increase in size Day 5: Blastocyst – a hollow ball of cells Outer layer Placenta Inner 50 cells Embryo Week 12: Fully differentiated foetus.
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Zygote: Totipotent stem cells
Blastocyst: Pluripotent stem cells Foetus and adult: Mulitpotent and unipotent stem cells
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Stem cells and their use in medicine
Sources of stem cells: Multipotent cells from adults Spare embryos from IVF (pluripotent) Umbilical cord stem cells Therapeutic cloning or admixed embryos
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Different view points
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Just a last point....
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Ethical considerations
Where do you stand on the issue of using embryonic stem cells? What are the advantages and disadvantages of using them in research?
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