Home / UCLA-led team maps blood stem cell development – paving the way to better treatments for blood cancer and sickle cell disease

UCLA-led team maps blood stem cell development – paving the way to better treatments for blood cancer and sickle cell disease

April 13, 2022

Patients suffering from blood disorders, like blood cancers or sickle cell disease, could now have a new treatment on the horizon. Recently published, UCLA-led research provides a detailed “road map” of human blood stem cell development, that can guide scientists in creating these life-saving stem cells in a laboratory, using a patient’s own cells. These findings, published in Nature, pave the way for growing fully functional blood stem cells in the lab.

The first co-authors of this publication are: Vincenzo Calvanese, Sandra Capellera-Garcia and Feiyang Ma. The senior author is Dr. Hanna Mikkola, UCLA professor in the Department of Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology–and also a member of the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA.

Other UCLA Life Sciences co-authors include: Iman Fares, Sophia Ekstrand, Júlia Aguadé-Gorgorió, Anastasia Vavilina, Diane Lefaudeux, Brian Nadel, Yanling Wang, and Matteo Pellegrini.

Click here, to read the full article about this exciting discovery in today’s UCLA Newsroom.

 

 

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