<<http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=19873>>

Stem cells may stop birth defects

AP - Embryonic stem cells may not have to actually grow replacement body
parts to be useful.

New research suggests these cells also secrete healing molecules powerful
enough to reverse a lethal birth defect in mice.

Stem cell specialists praised the surprise discovery by scientists at
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre. The study was reported in the
journal Science.

The "exciting new study ... expands the potential therapeutic repertoire"
of embryonic stem cells, said Dr. Kenneth Chien of the University of
California, San Diego.

Embryonic stem cells are master cells that can form into any tissue of
the body. Many scientists believe harnessing them might one day allow
tissue regeneration to treat numerous diseases.

The Sloan-Kettering experiment suggests an additional role.

Researchers injected stem cells directly into the embryos of mice
destined to develop heart defects so severe that the mice would die in
the womb. Half the mice were born with healthy hearts.

"We were surprised these (mice) were born and they were normal," lead
researcher Deigo Fraidenraich said.

Yet few of the stem cells actually grew into healthy heart tissue.
Instead, the researchers found that the stem cells secreted certain
molecules that signalled nearby heart cells to make changes, repairing
the defects developing in those tissues. Fraidenraich called the
secretions "rescue factors."

Chien, reviewing the findings in Science, said scientists now should test
whether such molecules also might treat adult heart disease.

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