Research focuses on select tissues injured through disease, surgery and transplants, but early findings indicate potential for broad applications
The concept sounds like the stuff of science fiction: take a pill, and suddenly new tissues grow to replace damaged ones. Researchers at Case Western Reserve and the University of Texas-Southwestern this week announced that they have taken significant steps toward turning this once-improbable idea into a vivid reality. In a study published in the June 12 edition of Science, they detail how a new drug repaired damage to the colon, liver and bone marrow in animal models—even going so far as to save the lives of mice who otherwise would have died in a bone marrow transplantation model.