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Date Submitted:
12/11/07
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Study Tests Blood Stem Cells to Boost Immune System
Description:
WEDNESDAY, June 20 (HealthDay News) -- A new method of increasing blood stem cells could one day promote quicker recovery of immune system function in patients who've undergone chemotherapy or bone marrow transplant for leukemia and other cancers, researchers say.
Blood stem cells have the capability to develop into assorted types of blood cells. In experiments with zebrafish, the researchers at Children's Hospital Boston demonstrated that a stable analog of prostaglandin can enhance production of blood stem cells, both during embryonic development and after the blood-forming system has been damaged. The finding about dmPGE2 -- a long-acting derivative of prostaglandin E2 -- marks the first time that stem cell production has been induced by a small molecule drug, said study senior author Dr. Leonard Zon of the hospital's Stem Cell Program and Division of Hematology/Oncology. Hospital researchers now plan to conduct a clinical trial of dmPGE2, which was originally tested 20 Read the Complete Article Similar content: Gene Holds Key to Blood Stem Cells, in Leukemia Natural Immune-System Molecule Helps Shield Against HIV, in Leukemia Many Men Getting Unnecessary Prostate Cancer Blood Tests, in Prostate Cancer Stem Cells Restore Memory in Mice, in Alzheimers Adult Stem Cells Found in Hair Follicles, in Multiple Sclerosis |

