Back in 2015, a team at Duke University made a world-first breakthrough, growing functioning Human Muscle Tissue in a laboratory using cells from muscle biopsies called myogenic precursors. Now the research has leapt forward with working muscle being successfully grown from scratch using pluripotent stem cells.
.. Continue Reading Working human muscle tissue grown from skin-derived stem cells
Category: Science
Tags:
- Duke University
- Muscle
- Stem Cells
- First contracting human muscle ever grown in laboratory
- First public tasting of US$330,000 lab-grown burger
- Scientists regenerate rat muscle tissue, with an eye toward human applications
- Scientists watch bioengineered self-healing muscle tissue grow within a mouse
- Crumpled graphene and rubber combined to form artificial muscle
- Using gelatin to bulk up "muscles-on-a-chip"