All posts by: Michael Zand

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Cancer-killing stem cells engineered in lab – BBC News

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2014-10-25 NEWS

BBC News

Cancer-killing stem cells engineered in lab
BBC News
Scientists from Harvard Medical School have discovered a way of turning stem cells into killing machines to fight brain cancer. In experiments on mice, the stem cells were genetically engineered to produce and secrete toxins which kill brain tumours
Stem cells that can kill cancer have been engineered by scientistsThe Independent
New Stem Cell Research Subsidiary in Costa RicaThe Costa Rica Star
Scientists Create Toxin Secreting Stem Cells To Fight Brain TumorsInternational Business Times
Medical Xpress –Cordis News –Headlines & Global News
all 34 news articles »
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2014-10-24 NEWS

Medical Daily

Stem Cells Loaded With Toxins Successfully Eliminate Traces Of Brain Cancer
Medical Daily
If stem cells are technically capable of converting into any cell, then what’s stopping them from becoming poison-packing cancer-killing super cells? That was the exact thought of a group of Harvard scientists who successfully engineered stem cells

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2014-10-24 NEWS

Medical Daily

Stem Cells Loaded With Toxins Successfully Eliminate Traces Of Brain Cancer
Medical Daily
If stem cells are technically capable of converting into any cell, then what’s stopping them from becoming poison-packing cancer-killing super cells? That was the exact thought of a group of Harvard scientists who successfully engineered stem cells

Continue reading

2014-10-24 NEWS

UCLA Scientists Propose Benchmark to Better Replicate Natural Stem Cell
Newswise (press release)
Newswise — In a study that will provide the foundation for scientists to better replicate natural stem cell development in an artificial environment, UCLA researchers at the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research

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2014-10-24 NEWS

UCLA Scientists Propose Benchmark to Better Replicate Natural Stem Cell
Newswise (press release)
Newswise — In a study that will provide the foundation for scientists to better replicate natural stem cell development in an artificial environment, UCLA researchers at the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research