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| <span style="font-size:150%">'''News - Novel coronavirus  (COVID-19)'''</span>
| <span style="font-size:150%">'''News - Complete human day 14 post-implantation embryo models from naïve Embryonic Stem Cells'''</span>
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| valign=top|[[File:MERS-CoV EM1.jpg|thumb|150px|alt=Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) electron micrograph|Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus electron micrograph (image CDC)]]
| valign=top|[[File:Stage6 bf03.jpg|thumb|150px|alt=Carnegie Stage 6 Embryo|Carnegie Stage 6 Embryo]]


This recent Nature paper{{#pmid:37673118|PMID37673118}} describes the use of naïve human Embryonic Stem Cells to recapitulate the early stages of human development.


First reported in Wuhan, {{China}} in 2019{{#pmid:31950516|PMID31950516}} and it is too soon to establish the fetal effects of infection{{#pmid:31953166|PMID31953166}}.
"The ability to study human post-implantation development remains limited due to ethical and technical challenges associated with intrauterine development after implantation....only genetically unmodified human naïve human ES cells...recapitulate the organization of nearly all known lineages and compartments of post-implantation human embryos including epiblast, hypoblast, extra-embryonic mesoderm, and trophoblast surrounding the latter layers...These human complete SEMs demonstrated developmental growth dynamics that resemble key hallmarks of post-implantation stage embryogenesis up to 13-14 days post-fertilization (dpf) (Carnegie stage 6a)."


[[File:WHO coronavirus world data 1.jpg|600px]]
:'''Links:''' {{stem cells}} | Carnegie stage {{CS6}}


Coronaviruses (Latin ''corona'' = crown or halo) name refers to the appearance of their virions, due to the presence of a "crown" of surface spikes. Several of the Coronavirus infections in humans occur initially as respiratory infections that originated from animal contact as a zoonotic infection.
<references/>
 
:'''Links:''' {{Coronavirus}} | {{abnormal environmental}} | {{zoonotic infection}} | [https://www.who.int/health-topics/coronavirus WHO coronavirus] | [https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html?CDC_AA_refVal=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cdc.gov%2Fcoronavirus%2Fnovel-coronavirus-2019.html CDC]
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! Older News Articles &nbsp;
! Older News Articles &nbsp;

Latest revision as of 16:10, 8 September 2023

News - Complete human day 14 post-implantation embryo models from naïve Embryonic Stem Cells
Carnegie Stage 6 Embryo
Carnegie Stage 6 Embryo

This recent Nature paper[1] describes the use of naïve human Embryonic Stem Cells to recapitulate the early stages of human development.

"The ability to study human post-implantation development remains limited due to ethical and technical challenges associated with intrauterine development after implantation....only genetically unmodified human naïve human ES cells...recapitulate the organization of nearly all known lineages and compartments of post-implantation human embryos including epiblast, hypoblast, extra-embryonic mesoderm, and trophoblast surrounding the latter layers...These human complete SEMs demonstrated developmental growth dynamics that resemble key hallmarks of post-implantation stage embryogenesis up to 13-14 days post-fertilization (dpf) (Carnegie stage 6a)."

Links: stem cells | Carnegie stage 6
  1. Oldak B, Wildschutz E, Bondarenko V, Comar MY, Zhao C, Aguilera-Castrejon A, Tarazi S, Viukov S, Pham TXA, Ashouokhi S, Lokshtanov D, Roncato F, Ariel E, Rose M, Livnat N, Shani T, Joubran C, Cohen R, Addadi Y, Chemla M, Kedmi M, Keren-Shaul H, Pasque V, Petropoulos S, Lanner F, Novershtern N & Hanna JH. (2023). Complete human day 14 post-implantation embryo models from naïve ES cells. Nature , , . PMID: 37673118 DOI.
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