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When someone gets an organ transplant theres a risk that their immune system will attack it as it doesnt have the same cellular markers as the rest of their body. Lately weve been able to reduce this risk for certain organs by decellularising them stripping the cells away to leave the supportive structural mesh called the extracellular matrix (ECM) and growing the patients own cells on them. Scientists recently examined how decellularisation affects the ECM in different tissues using samples from pigs. They found that up close there were small structural changes in the ECMs. Additionally muscular tissues could take more stress after decellularisation but skin became weaker. The image shows decellularised skin: the hole used to contain a hair follicle but these cells have been extracted: removing cells like this partly contributed to weakening the skin. This research helps us develop better ways to treat transplant tissue. Written by Esther Redhouse White Image from work by Stefan Schleifenbaum and Torsten Prietzel and colleagues University of Leipzig Germany and Department of Anatomy University of Otago Dunedin New Zealands Image originally published under a Creative Commons Licence (BY 4.0) Published in PLOS ONE March 2016 You can also follow BPoD on Twitter and Facebook
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via Tumblr http://ift.tt/1SiBpiy When someone gets an organ transplant theres a risk that their immune system will attack it as it doesnt ...
bpod-mrc: The Matrix Unloaded
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imaritha
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iMaritha