“Science wat is it all abou, Techmology wat is dat all abou,
is it good or is it wack!” Ali G (2003).
That doesn’t fit really into what I am going to write about,
it just makes me laugh. As you all can tell by now I like science. I think what
has been done and learnt in a relatively short period of history is amazing.
And now I have come across this astonishing story. Yes, I do have to say it is a press release
that looks as if it has been printed without any judicious editing. Never-the-less,
it is interesting.
Duke University have grown human muscle in a lab. I will add
to this, not only have they grown human muscle in a lab, they have grown human
muscle that works! This artificial muscle contracts and responds to external
stimuli such as electrical pulses, biochemical signals and
pharmaceuticals. How cool is that! The
benefits of this are mind boggling.
As stated in the article the main use currently will be
testing the way drugs work on the muscle. That means a lab can grow a working muscle
and carry out sophisticated testing on it. That, in turn, means that there
would be less and less need for muscle biopsies, and if you have ever seen one
done you know how much of a good thing that is.
Drug testing can be done in a controlled lab on human muscle
tissue, which means we may even be able to take some of the animal testing out
of the system and gain a better understanding of what drugs are doing within
the muscle. With the use of functioning artificial muscle the efficacy and
safety of drugs could be tested without jeopardising a patient's health. It may
even be possible to produce the functional and biochemical signals of rare
diseases allowing for early intervention. The possibilities are endless.
This is only the start of the possible applications of this
technology; just think how this could be mixed with other scientific advances.
This is just me spit balling: What about the all too common muscle injury or
permanent damage? Could this be the start of building replacement muscle tissue?
Or with the use of stem cells could we start to build working muscle where it
was once lost?
Even if this article is an overstatement of what has actually
been achieved and is only an unedited proof, it describes an awesome concept. I look forward to hearing more about this.
Madden. L., Juhas. M., Kraus. W. E., Truskey. G. A., and Bursac. N. (2015) Bioengineered human
myobundles mimic clinical responses of skeletal muscle to drugs. eLife, 4, doi: 10.7554/eLife.04885
This is very exciting, but the first thought I had was the potential for misuse. What happens when as we age, or a bodybuilder who is not happy with his size decides. Oh well this part doesn't work so well, I'll just get it replaced?
ReplyDeleteBut think of all the good things that can come out of this! ALS could be treated!
ReplyDeletethis is sound amazing but I hope it wont produce any harm for the humans. disease is the first harm that coming to my mind. and not for a second that I think that technology can go this far
ReplyDelete