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1950s: Scientists begin work on cloning frogs.
1956: The first successful intravenous infusion of bone marrow in patients receiving radiation and chemotherapy is carried out at Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital, New York state.
1978: Louise Brown is the first IVF baby born after fertilisation of a human egg outside the womb by Cambridge scientists.
1981: Mouse embyronic stem cells are cultivated at the universities of Cambridge and California.
1988: The first umbilical cord blood transplant takes place.
1990: The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act is passed.
1995: Researchers at the University of Wisconsin isolate the first embryonic stem cells in primates.
1996: Birth of Dolly the sheep, the first mammal “cloned” through cell nuclear replacement technique.
1998: Researchers in Wisconsin create human embryonic stem cells.
2003: The UK’s first human embryonic stem cell line is generated at King’s College London. In China Hui Zhen Sheng fuses human cells with rabbit eggs to create a new source of embryonic stem cells.
2005: The Government sets up the UK Stem Cell Initiative to draw up a vision for stem-cell research over the next decade.
2006: Researchers in Edinburgh make an advance in maintaining embryonic stem cells in a state in which they can turn into almost any cell type.
2007: A new stem cell found in rats and mice is deemed to be similar to human embryonic stem cells by scientists working independently at Oxford and Cambridge universities.
June 2007: The International Stem Cell Forum characterises 59 human embryonic stem-cell lines.
November 2007: Bill allowing the creation of hybrid embryos announced in Queen’s Speech.
May 12, 2008: The HFE Bill is due to receive a second reading in the House of Commons
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I cannot believe that the biggest breakthrough in the last ten years, the creation of induced pluripotent stem cells in human beings by Yamanaka et al. is missing from this list. Something like this is certainly the future and yet it is deliberately omitted.
David Jones, London,