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Great news, but I have this question: what possible reason or mechanism exists for assuming that an "induced" stem cell created from an already aged cell wouldn't get some of the induced damage carried along with the machinery? I can't see how this would be a 100% "reset".
Still, I imagine even a slightly pre-aged replacement organ from your own cells would be a helluva a lot better than a foreign transplant with rejection problems.
Here's another one -- if you're replacing an organ or tissue because of genetic disease, how long before the newly constructed replacement would start to fail in the same way? If triggers elsewhere in the body ar eimportnat, then it might happen sooner than later. OTOH if it would take another 50 years to start falling apart, that's surely good enough.
Yet I don't see either of these addressed in popular accounts, even speculative ones. I read about cancer questions, but not these.
[Posted by: newscaper at February 12, 2008 8:16 AM]
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