Skeletal stem cells delay bone healing and foster inflammageing in older people
Medical Xpress - 12-Aug-2021Treating with BMP2 and Csf1 antagonist in mice restored youthfulness to the aged skeletal system
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Assistant professor of surgery, Stanford Medicine
Dr. Chan's research focuses on the biology of aging in stem cells and stem cell niches. Niches are the highly specialized but poorly understood microenvironments that regulate stem cell activity. Using a reductionist approach, Dr. Chan has pioneered techniques to identify and isolate stem/progenitor cells of individual tissue types, including bone, cartilage, and blood vessels. These basic components can also be combined together to reconstitute a functional bone marrow niche that can support hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Dr. Chan's group recently identified a mouse skeletal stem cell (mSSC) that has the ability to make bone, cartilage, and HSC niches, in vitro and in vivo, and they are also close to reporting on the isolation of the human skeletal stem cell (hSSC).
Visit website: https://biox.stanford.edu/people/charles-chan
See also: Stanford University School of Medicine - Medical school that improves health through discoveries and innovation in health care, education and research
Details last updated 20-Aug-2020
Treating with BMP2 and Csf1 antagonist in mice restored youthfulness to the aged skeletal system
Principle tested and a success in mice and humans, to ease arthritis in the future