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Embryonic stem cells as a source of models for drug discovery.

Pouton CW, Haynes JM

Department of Pharmaceutical Biology, Monash University, 381 Royal Parade, Parkville, Victoria 3052, Melbourne, Australia. colin.pouton@vcp.monash.edu.au

Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) will become a source of models for a wide range of adult differentiated cells, providing that reliable protocols for directed differentiation can be established. Stem-cell technology has the potential to revolutionize drug discovery, making models available for primary screens, secondary pharmacology, safety pharmacology, metabolic profiling and toxicity evaluation. Models of differentiated cells that are derived from mouse ESCs are already in use in drug discovery, and are beginning to find uses in high-throughput screens. Before analogous human models can be obtained in adequate numbers, reliable methods for the expansion of human ESC cultures will be needed. For applications in drug discovery, involving either species, protocols for directed differentiation will need to be robust and affordable. Here, we explore current challenges and future opportunities in relation to the use of stem-cell technology in drug discovery, and address the use of both mouse and human models.

Published 1 August 2007 in Nat Rev Drug Discov, 6(8): 605-16.
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Stem Cells Research Today Archive:

Volume 1 (2004)
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Stem Cells Books

Basic Questions on Genetics, Stem Cell Research and Cloning: Are These Technologies Okay to Use? (Biobasics Series) (BioBasics Series)

Basic Questions on Genetics, Stem Cell Research and Cloning: Are These Technologies Okay to Use? (Biobasics Series) (BioBasics Series)