STEM-Talk

Episode 186: Mari Dezawa discusses her discovery of MUSE cells and the role of stem cells in regenerative medicine

12 snips
Sep 4, 2025
Dr. Mari Dezawa, a pioneer in stem-cell research and head of Tohoku University's Department of Stem Cell Biology, discusses her groundbreaking discovery of MUSE cells—unique stem cells with immense clinical potential. She shares insights into their role in regenerative medicine, particularly for treating neurodegenerative diseases and traumatic injuries. Mari also highlights the importance of multicultural experiences in shaping her scientific journey and emphasizes the therapeutic promise of MUSE cells in optimizing health and longevity.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

International Childhood Shaped A Scientist

  • Mari Dezawa grew up between the U.S., Germany, and Japan and credits early lab exposure to her father's research for sparking scientific curiosity.
  • She shifted from a potential legal career to medicine after struggling with Japanese language on return to Japan.
ANECDOTE

Lucky Mistake Sparked MUSE Discovery

  • Mari Dezawa accidentally left cultured cells in enzyme overnight and found a few survived, sparking the discovery of MUSE cells.
  • She then deliberately reproduced the stress conditions to isolate stress-enduring pluripotent cells from MSC cultures.
INSIGHT

MUSE Cells Act As Bodywide Repair Units

  • MUSE cells circulate from bone marrow and act as a body-wide maintenance system, homing to microscopic damage signals.
  • They phagocytose apoptotic fragments and differentiate into the needed cell type to repair tissues.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app