Culturing Potential: advances in ex vivo cell culture systems for haematopoietic cell-based regenerative therapies
Ayano Sugiyama-Finnis, Satoshi Yamazaki

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in growing blood stem cells outside the body to improve regenerative therapies.
Contribution
The paper highlights new cell culture methods and gene-editing integration for scalable, safe haematopoietic therapies.
Findings
Novel protocols enable standardized ex vivo expansion of haematopoietic stem cells.
Directed differentiation allows production of specific blood cell types without donor reliance.
Combining gene editing with culture systems enhances therapeutic functions of haematopoietic cells.
Abstract
Stem-cell derived therapies are an essential pillar in the field of regenerative medicine, utilising stem cell self-renewal and multipotent or pluripotent differentiation capabilities to give rise to functional, specialised cells to repair and restore tissue function. Haematopoietic cell therapies have been pivotal to the development of the regenerative medicine field and continue to hold significant promise enabled by recent technical innovation in cell culture approaches that have expanded their therapeutic potential. The development of novel cell culture protocols that allow for the standardised ex vivo expansion of haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) has facilitated the exploration of umbilical cord blood allogeneic HSC transplantation. Directed differentiation protocols of HSCs, embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells, to selectively produce a desired haematopoietic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPluripotent Stem Cells Research · CAR-T cell therapy research · CRISPR and Genetic Engineering
