Artificial Bone Marrow Created

Holds Promise for Cancer Patients and Immunosuppressed Individuals

Cancer patients and people with suppressed immune systems take note - a team of researchers led by Nicholas Kotov at the University of Michigan has come up with a way to make artificial bone marrow - which carries out its functions outside of
Artificial Bone Marrow Created
Date: December 23, 2008
Ann Arbor, MI
United States of America
 the body. The new technology was created by mimicking the lattices found in naturally occurring bone marrow, using a carefully constructed crystalline lattice of artificial polymers.

This new development has many potential applications, from researching the effectiveness and toxicity of new drugs without endangering a patient, to studying immune system responses, and for producing a continuous untainted supply of blood for people needing transfusions. Previous attempts at artificial bone marrow have focused on implantable scaffolds, which present all of the hazards common to any form of invasive surgery. Kotov believes this is the first time an artificial bone marrow for in vitro use has been devised.

The technology offers the promise of making it possible to create a continuous supply of a variety of blood cells, including not only red blood cells, but B cells, which are a major component of a person's response to infections and to certain kinds of cancers. B cell production is often suppressed in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy, leaving them open to infections.

Immature B cells, along with macrophages, lymphocytes, and T cells, comprise the immune surveillance system of the body, floating free until they recognize a danger such as a virus, bacteria, or cancer. Once a threat is recognized, B cells are triggered to proliferate and produce antibodies in response to these antigens. B cells play a key role in a person's adaptive immune response since once exposed to a pathogen, they are primed, and cloned, to allow a quicker response to that threat if it occurs again.

 
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Escellent resource for information. Great coverage. You made my month reporting this.

Posted on 12/25/2008 at 3:12:40 PM

I hope this turns out to be an excellent substitute, having known a good friend who had to go through an unsuccessful bone marrow transplant. Perhaps this procedure offers hope. Thanks for the update!

Posted on 12/24/2008 at 2:12:14 PM

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