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Engineered Cells Restore Movement in Parkinson’s Study

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MinotVoice
MinotVoice
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Nature
Dyani Lewis

Nature

Scientists may be one step closer to a future where cell therapy works for everyone — no matching, no rejection, no lifelong drugs. In a breakthrough study, researchers engineered human stem cells to hide from the immune system and restore muscle control in rats with Parkinson’s disease. The approach combines bold science with built-in safety checks, offering both promise and caution. If this universal cell line proves safe in humans, it could change how we treat not just Parkinson’s, but a host of diseases once thought incurable.

Dyani Lewis with Nature has the full story on the recently released research. April is Parkinson’s Awareness Month.

Nature
Dyani Lewis

Nature

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MinotVoice

MinotVoice

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