Doctors also saw obstacles, though. One of them was a U.S. Congress skittish about research on stem cells taken from unwanted human embryos and aborted fetuses. Indeed, last week 70 law makers asked in a firmly worded letter that the Federal Government ban all such work.
Yet the era of grow your own organs is already upon us, as researchers have sidestepped the stem-cell controversy by making clever use of ordinary cells. Today a machinist in
How have scientists managed to do all this without those protean stem cells? Part of the answer is smart engineering. Using materials such as polymers with pores no wider than a toothbrush bristle, researchers have learned to sculpt scaffolds in shapes into which cells can settle. The other part of the answer is just plain cell biology. Scientists have discovered that they don't have to teach old cells new tricks; given the right framework and the right nutrients, cells will organize themselves into real tissues as the scaffolds dissolve. I'm a great believer in the cells. They're not just lying there,looking stupidly at each other, says Francois Auger, an infectious-disease specialist and builder of artificial blood vessels at
FLESH AND BONES
Treating bone cells right is what Charles Vacanti, an anesthesiologist and director of the Center for Tissue Engineering, has been doing at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center in
Moving from the thumb to other hand parts, Charles' brother Joseph Vacanti, a transplant surgeon and tissueengineering pioneer in his own right, has grown human-shaped fingers on the back of a mouse, demonstrating that different cell types can grow together. He and colleagues at
VEINS AND ARTERIES
Blood vessels present a special challenge they must be strong yet flexible enough to expand and contract with each heartbeat. Joseph Vacanti's group has grown a tube of sheep-muscle cells around a polymer, added closely packed lining cells to the inside and stitched it into a sheep's pulmonary-artery circuit. Blood pulsing against the walls gradually strengthens the muscle cells just as weight training builds biceps. To make vessels,
LIVERS AND BLADDERS
Anthony Atala, a surgeon who makes bladders at
THE HEART AND BEYOND
One drawback with all these techniques is that it takes time, usually several weeks, to grow organs using the patient's own cells.Although using these cells sidesteps the rejection problem, time is a luxury many patients, particularly heart patients, can't afford. So Michael Sefton, who directs the tissue-engineering center at the University of Toronto, has proposed building a heart in a box complete with chambers, valves and heart muscles from cells genetically engineered to block the signal with which the body marshals cells to attack invaders. Sefton envisions spinoffs along the way-like immune system resistant replacement valves to justify the project’s $5 billion cost.
Replacement hearts-or even cells replacement heart parts are at least a decade off, estimates Kiki Hellman, who monitors tissue engineering efforts for the FDA. Any problem that requires lots of cell types talking to one another is really hard, she notes.Bone and cartilage efforts are much closer to fruition, and could be ready for human trials within two years. And what of those magical stem cells that can grow into any organ you happen to need-if the law, and biologists' knowledge, permit? Using them says Sefton, is really the Holy Grail
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