Medical Discovery News
Science permeates everyday life. Yet the understanding of advances in biomedical science is limited at best. Few people make the connection that biomedical science is medicine and that biomedical scientists are working today for the medicine of tomorrow. Our weekly five-hundred-word newspaper column (http://www.illuminascicom.com/) and two-minute radio show provide insights into a broad range of biomedical science topics. Medical Discovery News is dedicated to explaining discoveries in biomedical research and their promise for the future of medicine. Each release is designed to stimulate listeners to think, question and appreciate how science affects their health as well as that of the rest of the world. We also delve into significant biomedical discoveries and portray how science (or the lack of it) has impacted health throughout history.
Medical Discovery News
Extending Life With Pig Organs
Extending Human Life With Pig Organs
Welcome to Medical Discovery News. I’m Dr Norbert Herzog.
And I’m Dr. David Niesel
In the book, Charlotte’s Web by EB White, Charlotte the spider says, “After all, what’s a life, anyway? We’re born, we live a little while, we die.” True, but science is trying to extend life even if just a bit with xenotransplantation.
That means placing organs from another animal species into humans. And the research into pig organs has been ongoing for years. Among the most promising is the heart.
At first, scientists tried primate organs but only with some success. In the early two thousands, the switch was made to pig organs because they were plentiful, closer to human size and physiology, and had a lower rate of disease transfer.
The big problem has been organ rejection. Researchers are using CRISPR, a gene editing tool to remove antigens such as a sugar molecule on the surface of pig cells, called alpha-gal, that triggers our immune system to attack.
Lately, they’ve also been able to remove two other human reactive pig antigens as well as add human genes to the pig genome to improve acceptance of the organ.
All this was put into play, in September twenty-twenty-three when a fifty-eight year-old with end-stage heart disease received one of the genetically modified pig hearts.
Ultimately, his body rejected the pig heart but it did allow him to spend an extra six weeks with his family before he died.
Most of the over one hundred thousand people in the US waiting for an organ will die. Scientists believe one day xenotransplantation will change that.
We are Drs. David Niesel and Norbert Herzog, at UTMB and Quinnipiac University, where biomedical discoveries shape the future of medicine. For much more and our disclaimer go to medicaldiscoverynews.com or subscribe to our podcast. Sign up for expanded print episodes at www.illuminascicom.com