University of Pennsylvania: 'Self-Eating' Process of Stem Cells May Be the Key to New Regenerative Therapies
July 24, 2020
July 24, 2020
UNIVERSITY CITY, Pennsylvania, July 24 -- The University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine issued the following news release:
The self-eating process in embryonic stem cells known as chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) and a related metabolite may serve as promising new therapeutic targets to repair or regenerate damaged cells and organs, Penn Medicine researchers show in a new study published online in Science.
Human bodies contain over 200 different types o . . .
The self-eating process in embryonic stem cells known as chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) and a related metabolite may serve as promising new therapeutic targets to repair or regenerate damaged cells and organs, Penn Medicine researchers show in a new study published online in Science.
Human bodies contain over 200 different types o . . .