RNA offers a safer way to reprogram cells

Monday, July 26, 2010 - 07:35 in Biology & Nature

In recent years, scientists have shown that they can reprogram human skin cells to an immature state that allows the cells to become any type of cell. This ability, known as pluripotency, holds the promise of treating diseases such as diabetes and Parkinson’s disease by transforming the patients’ own cells into replacements for the nonfunctioning tissue.However, the techniques now used to transform cells pose some serious safety hazards. To deliver the genes necessary to reprogram cells to a pluripotent state, scientists use viruses carrying DNA, which then becomes integrated into the cell’s own DNA. But this so-called DNA-based reprogramming carries the risk of disrupting the cell’s genome and leading it to become cancerous. Now, for the first time, MIT researchers have shown that they can deliver those same reprogramming genes using RNA, the genetic material that normally ferries instructions from DNA to the cell’s protein-making machinery. This method could prove...

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