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    • Image courtesy of theday.co.uk

      theday.co.uk

      • Scientists could potentially clone organs with somatic cell nuclear transfer by cloning human embryos, extracting the stem cells from the blastocyst, and stimulating the stem cells to differentiate into the desired organ. Coaxing a human stem cell to become a liver, for instance, will require further research.
      science.howstuffworks.com › life › genetic
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  2. Aug 4, 2022 · Biotechnology and health. This startup wants to copy you into an embryo for organ harvesting. With plans to create realistic synthetic embryos, grown in jars, Renewal Bio is on a journey to the...

    • Antonio Regalado
  3. Mar 4, 2020 · Health 04 March 2020. By David Nield. (Todorean Gabriel/EyeEm/Getty Images) Tiny, simplified organs grown in the lab – known as organoids - can potentially make drug research and development a much quicker process; now scientists have produced a human 'body-on-a-chip', comprised of several living tissues at a microscopic scale.

  4. Nov 22, 2023 · What if you could eliminate the wait time and risky odds with traditional organ transplants by creating custom, cloned organs from your own cells that your body would recognize? Cloning advocates have touted this type of science as therapeutic cloning.

  5. Mar 11, 2021 · Abstract. Three‐dimensional (3D) bioprinting is an emerging, groundbreaking strategy in tissue engineering, allowing the fabrication of living constructs with an unprecedented degree of complexity and accuracy. While this technique greatly facilitates the structuring of native tissue‐like architectures, many challenges still remain to be faced.

    • Assaf Shapira, Tal Dvir
    • 10.1002/advs.202003751
    • 2021
    • Adv Sci (Weinh). 2021 May; 8(10): 2003751.
  6. Sep 6, 2019 · A new technique called SWIFT (sacrificial writing into functional tissue) ultimately may be used therapeutically to repair and replace human organs with lab-grown versions containing patients’ own cells.

  7. Jun 2, 2022 · An in vitro system to model organs must be able to replicate the complete structural and functional mechanism of a specific organ type. However, none of the systems developed so far can replicate the entire physiology of an organ, prompting the search for more informative systems.

  8. Nov 7, 2017 · Such cultures can be crafted to replicate much of the complexity of an organ, or to express selected aspects of it like producing only certain types of cells. Organoids grow from stem cells—cells that can divide indefinitely and produce different types of cells as part of their progeny.

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