Genetically modified cells in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering

Dima Sheyn, Olga Mizrahi, Shimon Benjamin, Zulma Gazit, Gadi Pelled, Dan Gazit*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

67 Scopus citations

Abstract

Regenerative medicine appears to take as its patron, the Titan Prometheus, whose liver was able to regenerate daily, as the field attempts to restore lost, damaged, or aging cells and tissues. The tremendous technological progress achieved during the last decade in gene transfer methods and imaging techniques, as well as recent increases in our knowledge of cell biology, have opened new horizons in the field of regenerative medicine. Genetically engineered cells are a tool for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, albeit a tool whose development is fraught with difficulties. Gene-and-cell therapy offers solutions to severe problems faced by modern medicine, but several impediments obstruct the path of such treatments as they move from the laboratory toward the clinical setting. In this review we provide an overview of recent advances in the gene-and-cell therapy approach and discuss the main hurdles and bottlenecks of this approach on its path to clinical trials and prospective clinical practice.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)683-698
Number of pages16
JournalAdvanced Drug Delivery Reviews
Volume62
Issue number7-8
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2010

Keywords

  • Gene-and-cell therapy
  • Genetic engineering
  • Regenerative medicine
  • Stem cells
  • Tissue engineering
  • Tissue-specific genes

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