Engineered Cells Restore Movement in Parkinson’s Study
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.
Subscribe!
It's free and it helps us grow and provide better information ForMinot!
Comments
Register or log in to join the conversation.