Friday, June 25th, 2010

Building a Lung

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A descriptive video outlining the lung engineering process. (Credits: Video file courtesy of Laura Niklason and Tom Petersen.) Viewed 1916 times. See More Videos

Researchers describe advances in engineering an artificial lung in mice. Writing in the journal Science, the researchers describe how they've taken apart a rat lung and rebuilt it with new cells, growing functioning lung structures on a biological 'scaffolding' taken from lung tissue. While the researchers say the appropriate cell types don't exist yet to allow this technique to work in humans, the fact that the engineered lungs were able to exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide just as normal lungs do offers hope for future medical applications. We'll talk about the work and where it's headed.

We'll also talk about work into creating a human 'lung-on-a-chip,'a microchip-mounted device the size of a pencil eraser that mimics a living, breathing human lung. Researchers hope that advance could help replace some medical studies that currently require the use of living animals.

Guests

Laura Niklason
Professor, Anesthesiology & Biomedical Engineering
Yale University
New Haven, Connecticut

Don Ingber
Director, Wyss Institute For Biologically Inspired Engineering
Harvard University
Boston, Massachusetts

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Segment produced by:Christopher Intagliata

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Image: Tissue engineered left lung after being implanted into adult rat recipient.
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