Morrison, a researcher at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and an associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, explained that SLAM genes either express certain cell surface receptor proteins or not. If they do not, scientists still can detect the negative expression and read it as part of the cell's "barcode."
The key to unlocking blood stem cell barcodes was to determine which SLAM proteins are associated with stem cells and which are not. Morrison and his team did this by giving laboratory mice doses of the various SLAM proteins and analyzing how the proteins affected the rodents.
Findings are published in the latest issue of Cell.
While study results only are conclusive for mice cells, Morrison believes human blood stem cells likely will possess comparable markers. Stem cells are primitive cells that have the ability both to grow into specific blood cells.
"We should know if humans have these markers in about a year's time," he told Discovery News. "Tests involving patients undergoing bone marrow transplants should follow soon afterwards, and could lead to safer, more effective drugs and treatments."