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| A day 8 stem cell-derived mouse embryo with developing brain and heart regions Credit: Kasey Lau for the Zernicka-Goetz laboratory |
Just two weeks after announcing the development of a mouse embryo model, complete with beating hearts and the foundations for a brain and other organs, from mouse stem cells, researchers in the laboratory of Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, Bren Professor of Biology and Biological Engineering, have published new findings about another mouse embryo model reaching similar developmental stages, but created out of only mouse embryonic stem cells. This modification has simplified the protocol and makes the embryo model easier to be adopted in other laboratories.
The new study appears in the journal Cell Stem Cell on September 8. The research was led by graduate students Kasey Lau and Hernan Rubinstein of the University of Cambridge and the Weizmann Institute of Science, respectively.
"This discovery opens up new avenues for understanding why the great majority of human pregnancies are lost and to create knowledge that will prevent this from happening," says Zernicka-Goetz, who is also a professor of mammalian development and stem cell biology at Cambridge University in the Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience. "This knowledge will also let us, with time, repair tissues and organs much more effectively than we can do now."









