Article Image

IPFS News Link • Science, Medicine and Technology

Breakthrough as Cellular 'Glue' Heals Wounds, Potentially Regrows Nerves...

• https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org, By Andy Corbley

Typical of science fiction is the scene wherein a space warrior sustains an injury and some kind of medical spray instantly repairs the damage. This could soon be science fact, thanks to a medical science breakthrough.

Researchers at the Univ. of California San Francisco have engineered molecules that act like a "cellular glue" for direct bonding of tissues—a long sought goal of regenerative medicine.

In a first-of-its-kind demonstration, the UCSF team produced customized adhesion molecules which bound select cells in a predictable manner, giving them de-facto control of the regenerative potential of the body.

"We were able to engineer cells in a manner that allows us to control which cells they interact with, and also to control the nature of that interaction," said senior author Wendell Lim, PhD, director of UCSF's Cell Design Institute. "This opens the door to building novel structures like tissues and organs."

Adhesive molecules can be found all throughout the human body creating communicative-bonds and immune pathways between tens of trillions of cells, but manipulating them has been beyond the reach of scientists so far.

Cellular bonding creates the characteristics of the structure they create. Tighter bonds form complex, solid organs like the liver or lungs, while looser bonds permit structures like immune molecules to do their disease fighting work with flexibility.