Embryo Donations
If you have used the Center for Advanced Reproductive
Services and have completed fertility treatment, you may
wish to give remaining frozen embryos to embryonic stem cell
research.
About Human Embryonic Stem Cells
The pre-implantation embryo, at about four or five days of
development, contains an inner cell mass, a group of
approximately 100 cells from which embryonic stem cells may
be derived. These cells can be cultured by researchers in a
laboratory. What makes these cells unique is that they are
pluripotent, which means they have the potential to form any
kind of cell in the body, and many of them can be formed in
a dish in the laboratory. This quality gives them a special
ability to be used in the laboratory to study many types of
disease. They can provide a tool to study early human
development to which researchers did not previously have
access. They may also be used in drug development to screen
out medications which have harmful side effects to human
beings that may not be detectable in animal trials.
State of Connecticut Stem Cell Research Program
On June 15, 2005, Public Act 05-149 was signed into law by
the Governor of the State of Connecticut. The goal of this
act is to provide $100 million in state public
funding to attract new research scientists and businesses to
Connecticut. As carefully determined by the Connecticut Stem
Cell Research Peer Review and Advisory Committees, almost $20
million in funding has been provided to stem cell
researchers in Connecticut. Dr. Ren-He Xu’s laboratory is
one of these recipients.
About Dr. Ren-He Xu
Dr. Ren-He Xu has been studying human embryonic stem
cells in the laboratory for more than six years, five with
Dr. James Thomson, who discovered the technique to first
derive them. Since leaving Wisconsin, Dr. Xu has set up a
Stem Cell Core Laboratory at the UConn Health Center to
share his considerable expertise with Connecticut
researchers. He aims to derive human embryonic stem cell
lines to study genetic disease and early human development.
More Information
If you would like more information about the process by
which to donate your frozen embryos for research, please
contact the University of Connecticut Stem Cell Core
administrator at 860-679-8350. Participation is strictly
voluntary.
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