Description
Leonard Hayflick in the US during the early 1960s showed that normal populations of embryonic cells divide a finite number of times. He published his results as 'The Limited In Vitro Lifetime of Human Diploid Cell Strains' in 1964. Hayflick performed the experiment with WI-38 fetal lung cells, named after the Wistar Institute, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Hayflick worked. Frank MacFarlane Burnet, later called the limit in capacity for cellular division the Hayflick Limit in 1974. In the experiment, Hayflick refuted Alexis Carrel's hypothesis that cells could be transplanted and multiplied indefinitely from a single parent cell line.
Details
Title
- "The Limited In Vitro Lifetime of Human Diploid Cell Strains" (1964), by Leonard Hayflick
Contributors
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2017-02-11
Subjects
Keywords
- Experiment
- Hayflick Limit
Collections this item is in