I think that this is probably what most of the research teams are asking themselves. Nobody really has an answer for you, but it seems like the day is not too far off where they try to implant these neopapillae in a human scalp. The taiwanese are probably doing something very similar already. In my mind, there are still so many questions left, even if they do make a terminal hair in the lab. The sebaceous gland issue is one of them, but all in all the balding scalp just seems to be such an inhospitable environment. If the breakdown of the fat layer is so important, then what is going to stop the existing dying follicles from sending those signals and ruining the environment for the new follicles? Hopefully this technique will bring positive surprises, and not everything will be biologically set up against the new follicles. maybe they will improve the surrounding tissue. we can only hope. right now it's all still very speculative, but regenerating organs of all types in the lab seems to be a future certainty.
My guess is that when a follicle develops in the embryo, there is a constant stream over time of the right combinations of gorwth factors, nutrients, etc, that guide the HF cells to become a terminal hair. Even babies' hair is thin and wispy, it takes time for follicles to become mature. In that light, I don't know why it would be expected for hair follicles to create terminal hairs in the span of 14 days. Might it make sense to determine which growth factors are expressed just at that crucial moment when a baby's hair turns from wispy to full and terminal? I feel like the keys to the puzzle lie in that transition. i assume it would be hard to get baby scalp samples though
My guess is that when a follicle develops in the embryo, there is a constant stream over time of the right combinations of gorwth factors, nutrients, etc, that guide the HF cells to become a terminal hair. Even babies' hair is thin and wispy, it takes time for follicles to become mature. In that light, I don't know why it would be expected for hair follicles to create terminal hairs in the span of 14 days. Might it make sense to determine which growth factors are expressed just at that crucial moment when a baby's hair turns from wispy to full and terminal? I feel like the keys to the puzzle lie in that transition. i assume it would be hard to get baby scalp samples though

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