Parthenogenetic Stem Cells in Nonhuman Primates

José B. Cibelli(Advanced Cell Technology (United States)), Kathleen A. Grant, Karen Chapman(Advanced Cell Technology (United States)), Kerrianne Cunniff(Advanced Cell Technology (United States)), Travis J. Worst, Heather L. Green, Stephen J. Walker, Philip H. Gutin(Wake Forest University), Lucy Vilner(Advanced Cell Technology (United States)), Viviane Tabar(Wake Forest University), Tanja Dominko(Advanced Cell Technology (United States)), J.J. Kane(Wake Forest University), Peter J. Wettstein(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Robert Lanza(Wake Forest University), Lorenz Studer(Wake Forest University), Kent E. Vrana, Michael D. West(Wake Forest University)
Science
February 1, 2002
Cited by 312

Abstract

Parthenogenesis is the process by which an egg can develop into an embryo in the absence of sperm. This process has been characterized to some extent in nonhuman primates ([1][1], [2][2]); however, to date, no primate parthenogenetic embryonic stem (ES) cell lines have been derived. Although


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