Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement
TO READ THIS STORY - you must have a paid subscription to Technology Review OR you can purchase special archive reading credits here. Choose from these great offers below.
I'm a paid subscriber please
log me in
I want to purchase this article for
only $1.99
(requires login)
I want to purchase five articles for
only $3.99
(requires login)
I want to buy
1 Year TOTAL Access for
only $24.95
(requires login)

Click here if you are currently a Technology Review print or digital subscriber and do not have access to this article.

Click here if you are an MIT alum and do not have access to this article.

Click here if to enter an offer code for access to this article.

July/August 2009

Medicine's New Toolbox

An alternative way to make stem cells could open a window on human disease.

By Lauren Gravitz

Reprogrammed: Scientists have genetically modified skin cells so that they behave like embryonic stem cells, which can develop into virtually every tissue type in the body.
Credit: Junying Yu/University of Wisconsin-Madison

On the second floor of a building in one of South San Francisco's numerous business parks, a new biotech company has set up shop. The walls sport a fresh coat of white paint, and the bench tops are shiny and bare. The tile floors are still glossy, and an expensive new cell-sorting machine sits, untouched, on the loading dock downstairs.

The building's new inhabitant, iZumi Bio, is pursuing a technology as new and full of promise as the lab itself--a technology that's moving faster than the company can fill its empty space. It revolves around induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells: adult cells genetically reprogrammed to act like embryonic stem cells, which can turn into just about any type of cell in the human body.

  Select from the choices above
to read the entire article.


Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

How to Make Robotic Hands
Sponsored by
More videos »
Technology Review September/October 2010

Current Issue

The TR35
Our annual selection of the world's top innovators under the age of 35.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2010 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.