And the Spirit & the bride say, come.... Reveaaltion 22:17

And the Spirit & the bride say, come.... Reveaaltion 22:17
And the Spirit & the bride say, come...Revelation 22:17 - May We One Day Bow Down In The DUST At HIS FEET ...... {click on blog TITLE at top to refresh page}---QUESTION: ...when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth? LUKE 18:8

Thursday, January 9, 2025

Creation Moment 1/10/2025 - EndoMac progenitors for a Fallen World

For we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together..... Romans 8:22

"Researchers in Australia have found a whole new type of cell that fills a major hole in our understanding of how the mammal body heals.
For over a century, scientists have hypothesized that a cell like this existed – and now, an adult version has been found at last, hiding in the aorta of grown mice.
Researchers have named the cells '
EndoMac progenitors', and the team is now searching for similar players in the human body.

"These cells have an important job, to help grow blood vessels when the body calls for it," explains medical scientist Sanuri Liyanage.
"They are activated by injury or poor blood flow, at which point they rapidly expand to aid in healing."

To understand how an
EndoMac progenitor cell works, first it's important to consider the macrophage.
Macrophages
are the first immune cells produced by an embryo, and they are essential to development.
In adulthood, most tissues in the mammal body contain
macrophages that were made during this very early stage. After birth, resident populations occasionally renew themselves to keep fresh and ready to gobble up pathogens.

About a century ago, however, scientists hypothesized that stem cells circulating in the blood of mammals could make new
macrophages, refreshing the population already living in the body's various tissues.
For many years, scientists believed these circulating
macrophage makers, which have previously been found in the embryos of mice, existed into adulthood because they were seeded in bone marrow.
But recent evidence suggests that bone marrow-derived stem cells are actually restricted to just a few tissues, including the gut, the skin, and the heart.

Now, some scientists suspect that new
macrophages in adulthood are born from undiscovered stem cells, which were established in the body long before birth.
Its findings suggest that embryonic progenitor cells for
macrophages are seeded in the aorta of the heart during early development. Then, as the mice age, these circulating stem cells introduce new macrophages into tissue.

Because
EndoMac progenitors do not have 'name tags', researchers say they can be transplanted without fear of the immune system attacking the foreign matter.
When this colony was injected into the bloodstream of a mouse whose hind leg had been restricted from blood circulation to mimic a 'diabetic wound', its leg injury healed faster. After two weeks, the circulating stem cells had transformed into
macrophages and endothelial cells, which line blood vessels.

Now, the team is investigating whether a similar cell exists in the human aorta. Those findings are not yet published, but the researchers have hinted that initial results are optimistic." MS/SciAlert