A number of research groups have reported that cells can be forced to differentiate into apparently unrelated cell types (i.e. skin cells into blood cells, or blood cells into cardiac muscle cells). This phenomenon, called transdifferentiation or direct reprogramming, has been reported in animals and more recently in human cells, and has the potential to induce regenerative capacity directly in the tissue without the need to isolate or expand pluripotent cells outside the body of the patient. The recipes for transdifferentiation are not very efficient yet, but research is underway to try to optimize them and assess their long-term safety and efficacy. Researchers like Fernando Camargo, PhD, are exploring direct reprogramming to turn liver cells into liver progenitors that can repair the tissue directly in the damaged organ.