Qeliza nga lëkura e njeriut, e rritur në laborator mund të avancoj trajtimin kundër rënies së flokëve

Organoids are small, lab-grown cell groupings are designed to model real-world organs -in this case, skin. A paper published in Nature describes the hairy creation as the first hair-baring human skin organoid made with pluripotent stem cells, or the master cells present during early stages of embryonic development that later turn into specific cell types.

The hirsute organoid's development was led by Karl Koehler, Ph.D., formerly of Indiana University School of Medicine and now at Boston Children's Hospital. An Oregon Health & Science University graduate student, Benjamin Woodruff, contributed by helping make the organoids as a post-baccalaureate research technician in the Stanford University lab of Stefan Heller, Ph.D.

"This makes it possible to produce human hair for science without having to take it from a human," explained Woodruff, who now is completing his first year of cell and developmental biology graduate studies at OHSU. "For the first time, we could have, more or less, an unlimited source of human hair follicles for research."

Having access to more hair-growing skin can help researchers better understand hair growth and development -- and maybe even provide clues needed to reverse a retreating hair line.


Source: sciencedaily.com

UNI Cosmetics Blog is fully dedicated to promoting articles on hair, make-up, nails, body, fashion and many other educative topics. All the topics, videos, photos are produced with a high commitment, by engaging professionals in each of the subject, with the aim to provide instructions for your daily style!