• 

Stem cell breakthrough could impact on bone repair 

 
    Professor Richard Oreffo

News

Stem cell breakthrough could impact on bone repair  

Scientists at the University of Southampton have created a method to generate bone cells which could lead to revolutionary for people suffering from bone fractures or degenerative conditions.

Guided by research carried out by Dr Emmajayne Kingham at the University of Southampton in collaboration with the University of Glasgow, the scientists have cultured human embryonic stem cells on to the surface of plastic materials and assessed their ability to change. They were able to use the nanotopographical patterns on the biomedical plastic to manipulate human embryonic stem cells towards bone cells. This was done without any chemical enhancement.

Professor Richard Oreffo, who led the University of Southampton team, explains: “To generate bone cells for regenerative medicine and further medical research remains a significant challenge. However we have found that by harnessing surface technologies that allow the generation and ultimately scale up of human embryonic stem cells to skeletal cells, we can aid the tissue engineering process. This is very exciting.

“Our research may offer a whole new approach to skeletal regenerative medicine. The use of nanotopographical patterns could enable new cell culture designs, new device designs, and could herald the development of new bone repair therapies as well as further human stem cell research,” Professor Oreffo adds.

The study was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC).

Dr Nikolaj Gadegaard, Institute of Molecular, Cell and Systems Biology at the University of Glasgow, said "Our previous collaborative research showed exciting new ways to control mesenchymal stem cell – stem cells from the bone marrow of adults – growth and differentiation on nanoscale patterns.

“This new Southampton-led discovery shows a totally different stem cell source, embryonic, also respond in a similar manner and this really starts to open this new field of discovery up. With more research impetus, it gives us the hope that we can go on to target a wider variety of degenerative conditions than we originally aspired to. This result is of fundamental significance."

Published in Small
 


Digital Edition

Lab Asia Dec 2025

December 2025

Chromatography Articles- Cutting-edge sample preparation tools help laboratories to stay ahead of the curveMass Spectrometry & Spectroscopy Articles- Unlocking the complexity of metabolomics: Pushi...

View all digital editions

Events

Smart Factory Expo 2026

Jan 21 2026 Tokyo, Japan

Nano Tech 2026

Jan 28 2026 Tokyo, Japan

Medical Fair India 2026

Jan 29 2026 New Delhi, India

SLAS 2026

Feb 07 2026 Boston, MA, USA

Asia Pharma Expo/Asia Lab Expo

Feb 12 2026 Dhaka, Bangladesh

View all events