News

It's alternately called "The Vacanti Mouse" and "the ear mouse ... The whole process involved making a scaffold that has the shape and the size of an ear. The material is man-made, biocompatible ...
Twenty years ago, Harvard surgeons Joseph and his brother Charles Vacanti ... How did the mouse get the ear on its back? The whole process involved making a scaffold that has the shape and ...
But there was absolutely no genetic engineering involved in getting ... been genetically engineered. The "mouse-ear" project began in 1989, when Charles Vacanti (brother of Joseph) managed to ...
“Earmouse” or the Vacanti mouse, as the animal has become known, continued to grow the piece of tissue out of its back until it resembled the size and shape of a human ear. The team published ...
The technique is similar to the one used in the 1990s to create the famous “Vacanti mouse”, which had a human-like ear growing on its back. “It’s a very exciting approach,” says Tessa ...
It's alternately called “The Vacanti Mouse” and “the ear mouse ... How did the mouse get the ear on its back? The whole process involved making a scaffold that has the shape and the size of an ear.