Maybe if Intercytex and Tsuji published their failed tests the world could benefit from knowledge of their process and problems. That's what real academia is about.
Not taking a victory lap in the academic journals when something works, and running away when it doesn't.
I have read his publications. In his publications he sections the follicle of a developing dog tooth, reimplants it, and calls it multiplication when it is clear that each half of the divided tissue grew to half its overall size and was not multiplied at all
I still don't understand why they need human tests to prove anything.
They say they can create lab-grown skin, so use it as a scaffold to clone and grow hair follicles, and show the world they can grow an infinite supply of donor follicles. No regulatory approval needed, no time wasted...
Is it though? Did Intercytex ever make a statement after they failed, stating that they had failed? No news is bad news in this industry, they don't want to scare away the investors