Sullivan, Stephen / Cowan, Chad / Eggan, Kevin (eds.) Human Embryonic Stem Cells The Practical Handbook
  1. Edition - June 2007 142.- Euro 2007. 424 Pages, Hardcover - Practical Approach Book - ISBN-10: 0-470-03356-8 ISBN-13: 978-0-470-03356-2 - John Wiley & Sons

Sample Chapter
Short description Written by professionals working in the leading research laboratories, Human Embryonic Stem Cells: The Practical Handbook is a valuable, practical guide to deriving and culturing these cells. The book contains the first centralized collection of methods used in human embryonic stem cell biology. It covers the derivation of human stem cell lines, obtaining cells from human stem cell banks, culturing and characterizing the cells, differentiation of the cells in vitro and in vivo, and finally the use of human embryonic stem cells in drug screening and toxicity testing. The book differs from others published as it is centered on practical protocols for human (not mouse) embryonic stem cell research.
From the contents Foreword. Davor Solter
Preface.
Section 1: Obtaining and culturing human embryonic stem cells.
1 Organization and good aseptic technique in the human embryonic stem cell laboratory. Minal J Patel, Emma L Stephenson, and Stephen L Minger
2 Sourcing human embryonic stem cell lines. Glyn Stacey
3 Human embryo culture for human embryonic stem cell derivation. R. Douglas Powers and Jeannine Witmyer
4 Derivation of human embryonic stem cell lines. Stephen Sullivan, Dieter Egli, Hidenori Akutsu, Douglas A. Melton, Kevin Eggan and Chad A. Cowan
5 Standard culture of human embryonic stem cells. Jeremy M. Crook, Rachel Horne, and Alan Colman
6 Culture of human embryonic stem cells in chemically defined conditions. Julie Hsu Clark and Sheng Ding
Section 2: Characterization of undifferentiated embryonic stem cells.
7 Phenotypic analysis of human embryonic stem cells. Jonathan S. Draper, Cheryle A. Séguin and Peter W. Andrews
8 Genetic and epigenetic analysis of human embryonic stem cells. Laurie A. Boyer, Rudolf Jaenisch, and Maisam Mitalipova
Section 3: Manipulation of human embryonic stem cells.
9 In vivo differentiation of human embryonic stem cells. Scott A. Noggle, Francesca M. Spagnoli, Ali H. Brivanlou
10 In vitro differentiation of human embryonic stem cells. A. Henry Sathananthan and Alan Trounson
11 Differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into extraembryonic cell types. Cheryle A. Séguin and Jonathan S. Draper
12 Directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into: (a) Early endoderm cells. Kenji Osafune, Alice E. Chen and Douglas A. Melton (b) Hepatic cells. Neta Lavon and Nissim Benvenisty (c) Pancreatic cells. Hiram Chipperfield
13 Directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into: (a) Cardiomyocytes. Christine Mummery, Robert Passier and Chris Denning (b) Endothelial cells. Carrie Soukup, Shulamit Levenberg and Ondine Cleaver (c) Osteogenic cells. Jeffrey M. Karp, Alborz Mahdavi, Lino S. Ferreira, Ali Khademhosseini and Robert Langer (d) Hematopoietic in vivo repopulating cells. Shannon McKinney-Freeman, Thorsten M. Schlaeger and George Q. Daley (e) Lymphocytes. Petter S. Woll and Dan S. Kaufman (f) Myeloid cells. Chantal Cerdan and Mickie Bhatia
14 Directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into: (a) Forebrain neurons. Emily A. Davis and Lawrence S.B. Goldstein (b) Dopaminergic neuron. Jan Pruszak and Ole Isacson (c) Spinal motor neurons. Bao-Yang Hu and Su-Chun Zhang
15 (a) Gene targeting: knock out and knock in by homologous recombination. Thomas P. Zwaka (b) RNA interference in human embryonic stem cells. M. William Lensch, Asmin Tulpule and Holm Zaehres (c) Generation of gene reporters using bacterial artificial chromosome recombineering. Andrew J. Washkowitz and David A. Shaywitz
Afterword. Azim Surani
Index.
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