Organoids
From the Caryl and Israel Englander Institute for Precision Medicine website:
“Organoids can be made to resemble organs or tissues such as gut, kidney, pancreas, liver, breast, prostate, and even brain tissue, all complete with accurate micro-anatomy. Due to their amazing ability to self-organize into tissue structures, researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine have developed a way to grow organoid structures that mimic actual patients’ tumors, and allow our researchers to study how different cancers develop, change, and might respond to various drug therapies.”
Видео Organoids канала XVIVO Scientific Animation
“Organoids can be made to resemble organs or tissues such as gut, kidney, pancreas, liver, breast, prostate, and even brain tissue, all complete with accurate micro-anatomy. Due to their amazing ability to self-organize into tissue structures, researchers at Weill Cornell Medicine have developed a way to grow organoid structures that mimic actual patients’ tumors, and allow our researchers to study how different cancers develop, change, and might respond to various drug therapies.”
Видео Organoids канала XVIVO Scientific Animation
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
30 октября 2020 г. 21:00:00
00:01:47
Другие видео канала
Organoid Technologies in ResearchAn organoid approach to fighting disease | Prisca Liberali | TEDxBaselNEURALINKWhat are mini brains? - Madeline LancasterGeraldine Hamilton: Body parts on a chipHow to Grow Cerebral Organoids from Human Pluripotent Stem CellsCOBRA PLATFORM MOACONDUIT™ INTERBODY PLATFORMNIH UNLOCKING THE MYSTERIES OF EXTRACELLULAR RNA COMMUNICATIONBiology: Cell Structure I Nucleus Medical MediaPALOVAROTENE MOAGLEEVEC (IMATINIB) MOAHans Clevers - Lab-grown human organs (organoids)Making Brain Organoids: A PrimerWhy Do We Have Different Seasons? | California Academy of SciencesMadeline A. Lancaster on Modeling human brain development in cerebral organoidsHow to Culture Mouse Intestinal Organoids: Isolating Intestinal Crypts and Establishing OrganoidsOrganoids: Cancer in 3D - Sanger InstituteIntroduction to 3D Biology: Organoids, Spheroids and Applications Relative to 2D CultureHow to 3D print human tissue - Taneka Jones