Stem cells
Stem cells in humans
An embryo develops from a fertilised egg. Cells in the early stages of the development of an embryo are known as stem cellA cell found in foetuses, embryos and some adult tissues that can give rise to a wide range of other cells.. These are cells that have not undergone differentiationWhen an unspecialised cell becomes a more specialised cell type.. A cell which has not yet become specialisedA cell that has become differentiated to carry out a particular function, eg red blood cell. is undifferentiated.
If cells are removed from the embryo they will differentiate into any cell type. These are called embryonic stem cells. Some stem cells remain in the bodies of adults as adult stem cells.
Adult stem cells can be found in limited numbers in several regions of the body, eg:
- brain
- eyes
- blood
- heart
- liver
- bone marrow
- skin
- muscle
Adult stem cells can differentiate into related cell types only, for instance, bone marrow cells can differentiate into blood cells and cells of the immune system, but not other cell types.
Using human stem cells
Stem cells can divide to produce new cells, which can then divide into different cell types. They therefore have the potential to be transplanted into patients to treat medical conditions and disease. They could be used to replace cells that have been damaged or destroyed, for example:
- in type 1 diabetes
- in cases of multiple sclerosis, which can lead to paralysis
- in cases of spinal cord or brain injury, which have led to paralysis
The stem cells used could be:
- embryonic stem cells
- adult stem cells
Embryonic stem cells can differentiate into a wider range of cell types, but are difficult to obtain. The best source is the five-day-old embryo.
Adult stem cells will differentiate into a narrower range of cell types. Bone marrow transplants are an example of adult stem cell transplant. Bone marrow cells will differentiate into different types of blood cells. Bone marrow transplants are carried out:
- in cases of blood cell cancerA disease caused by normal cells changing so that they grow and divide in an uncontrolled way. The uncontrolled growth causes a lump called a tumour to form., eg leukaemia and lymphoma
- when blood cells have been destroyed, eg during cancer treatment
Benefits and risks associated with the use of stem cells in medicine
Stem cells have great potential, eg in treating patients with currently untreatable conditions, growing organs for transplants, and research. The benefits of using your own stem cells include:
- no rejection
- no need to find a donor
- no need for tissue typing
But there are clinical, ethicalRelating to right and wrong, eg ethical companies are often ones that act in a responsible way. and social issues associated with their use. These issues will be different for the growth and transplant of adult, embryonic, or therapeutically-cloned stem cells. They will also depend on whether the stem cells are to be used for therapy or research.
Clinical issues
- There is no guarantee how successful these therapies will be, for example, the use of stem cells in replacing nerve cells lost in Parkinson’s disease patients.
- The current difficulty in finding suitable stem cell donors.
- The difficulty in obtaining and storing a patient’s embryonic stem cells. These would have to be collected before birth – some clinics offer to store blood from the umbilical cord when a person is born.
- Mutations have been observed in stem cells cultured for a number of generations, and some mutated stem cells have been observed to behave like cancer cells.
- Cultured stem cells could be contaminated with viruses which would be transferred to a patient.
Ethical issues
- One source of embryonic stem cells is unused embryos produced by in vitro fertilisation (IVF).
- For therapeutic cloningUsing cloning technology for medicinal purposes. One example is to use a person's DNA to clone one of their organs for use in transplanting., is it right to create embryos for therapy, and destroy them in the process?
- Embryos could come to be viewed as a commodity, and not as an embryo that could develop into a person.
- At what stage of its development should an embryo be regarded as, and treated as, a person?
Social issues
- Educating the public about what stem cells can and cannot do is important.
- Whether the benefits of stem cell use outweigh the risks.
- Much of the research is being carried out by commercial clinics, so reported successes are not subject to peer review.
- Patients could be exploited by paying for expensive treatments and being given false hope of a cure as stem cell therapies are only in their developmental stages.
More guides on this topic
- Classification and biodiversity – WJEC
- DNA and inheritance – WJEC
- Variation – WJEC
- Mutation – WJEC
- Evolution – WJEC
- The nervous system – WJEC
- Homeostasis – WJEC
- The role of the kidneys in homeostasis – WJEC
- Micro-organisms and their applications – WJEC
- Disease, defence and treatment – WJEC
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