Blood system forms in the placentaA rich source of blood stem cellsMarch 3, 2005Researchers at Children's Hospital Boston and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) report a surprising finding about embryonic development: The blood system begins to form not only in the embryo itself, but also in the placenta, the organ that nurtures the baby in utero. "There must be something unique about the placenta that nurtures blood stem cells and discourages them from differentiating," says Stuart Orkin, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Children's and DFCI, and a senior investigator of the study. "If we figure out what's special about the placental environment, we may learn how to grow blood stem cells in large numbers for clinical application." Blood stem cells are used in treating blood cancers like leukemia and other blood diseases, and in patients receiving transplants, but growing them in quantity is difficult. The cells don't multiply readily in the laboratory, so they must be harvested from bone marrow by needle aspiration, a painful procedure, or coaxed into the blood and then collected. Both methods yield only a limited number of blood stem cells. |