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The Scientist: NewsBlog:
Jostling spurs cell spreading
Posted by Jef Akst [Entry posted at 18th October 2009 06:00 PM GMT]
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implications for ultrasound, cancer treatements? by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-11-17 15:31:27] Perhaps the jostling of embryonic cells during common fetal ultrasounds may not be totally benign, then?
Also, could this be a way to force cancer stem cells to differentiate and thus lose their malignancy? Just thoughts ... Genostemness Induction By Mechanical Force by Dov Henis [Comment posted 2009-10-21 12:31:58] Genostemness Induction By Mechanical Force
In "Genostemness Induction" LINK see From "For blood stem cells, the force is strong" LINK Blood flow boosts production of blood stem cells, two new studies show. "It?s still not clear how the cells sense shear stress, and researchers are trying to unravel the chain of events between mechanical force and stem cell production in order to manipulate the process to make blood stem cells for transplant." Dov Henis not surprising to some, but nice to see the concept get publicity by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2009-10-19 12:28:41] There are some scientists out there who won't find these results particularly surprising (such as Don Ingber, who was quoted in the article, or Mina Bissell, just to name two out of a very large handful of "mavericks" in cell biology and developmental biology who have been trying to push the conceptual envelope in this direction for some time now). I'm pleased to see that the ideas are getting some much-needed publicity, but I do dearly hope that all of the creative and persistent investigators who have been working in this area, some of them for decades, will finally get appropriate due credit for the paths they've trailblazed. Some of them have persevered despite encountering considerable obstacles in getting their work supported through mainstream sources of funding such as NIH, largely because their work has been so envelope-pushing and so contrary to what until now has been considered "that which is already known." These scientists deserve their recognition!
And -- study section members PLEASE take note -- just because something doesn't fit the current dogma doesn't mean it isn't worth pursuing!! Please consider the possibility that it may be far more worthwhile to pursue the unknown than to pursue the already-known! Comment on this blog |