Abstract

Rare diseases are highly diverse and complex regarding molecular underpinning and clinical manifestation and afflict millions of patients worldwide. The lack of appropriate model systems with face and construct validity and the limited availability of live tissues and cells from patients has largely hampered the understanding of underlying disease mechanisms. As a consequence, there are no adequate treatment options available for the vast majority of rare diseases. Over the last decade, remarkable progress in pluripotent and adult stem cell biology and the advent of powerful genomic technologies opened up exciting new avenues for the investigation, diagnosis, and personalized therapy of intractable human diseases. Utilizing the entire range of available stem cell types will continue to cross-fertilize different research areas and leverage the investigation of rare diseases based on evidence-based medicine. Standardized cell engineering and manufacturing from inexhaustible stem cell sources should lay the foundation for next-generation drug discovery and cell therapies that are broadly applicable in regenerative medicine. In this chapter we discuss how patient- and disease-specific iPS cells as well as adult stem cells are changing the pace of biomedical research and the translational landscape.

Full Text
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