Archive for the ‘Stem Cells’ category

According to the FDA, Your Stem Cells Are Now Drugs [Fda]

February 2nd, 2012

In recent court filings, the Food and Drug Administration has asserted that stem cells—you know, the ones our bodies produce naturally—are in fact drugs and subject to its regulatory oversight. So does that make me a controlled substance?

The bizarre controversy revolves around the FDA's attempt to regulate the Centeno-Schultz Clinic in Colorado that performs a nonsurgical stem-cell therapy called Regenexx-SD. It is designed to treat moderate to severe joint, tendon, ligament, and bone pain using only adult stem cells. Doctors draw your blood, spin it through a centrifuge, extract the stem cells and re-inject them into your damaged joints. It uses no other drugs. No drugs means no FDA oversight and that does not sit well with the administration.

The FDA has since argued that a) stem cells are drugs and b) they fall under FDA regulation because the clinic is engaging in interstate commerce. That's right, a process performed at the clinic using the patient's own bodily fluids constitutes interstate commerce because, according to the administration, out-of-state patients using Regenexx-SD would “depress the market for out-of-state drugs that are approved by FDA.”

Funny, that sounds less like the FDA protecting the health of the country's citizens and more like the FDA defending its enforcement turf. The two parties have been at odds for over four years now, so we may have a while until we know if every American has in fact become a regulatable good subject to government regulation. [ANH-USA via Slash Gear]

Image via the AP

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According to the FDA, Your Stem Cells Are Now Drugs [Fda]

Intra-arterial technique of stem cell transplantation may enhance functional recovery from TBI

February 2nd, 2012

Experiments in brain-injured rats show that stem cells injected via the carotid artery travel directly to the brain, where they greatly enhance functional recovery, reports a study in the February issue of Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health.

The carotid artery injection technique—along with some form of in vivo optical imaging to track the stem cells after transplantation—may be part of emerging approaches to stem cell transplantation for traumatic brain injury (TBI) in humans, according to the new research, led by Dr Toshiya Osanai of Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine, Sapporo, Japan.

Advanced Imaging Technology Lets Researchers Track Stem Cells
The researchers evaluated a new “intra-arterial” technique of stem cell transplantation in rats. Within seven days after induced TBI, stem cells created from the rats' bone marrow were injected into the carotid artery. The goal was to deliver the stem cells directly to the brain, without having them travel through the general circulation.

Before injection, the stem cells were labeled with “quantum dots”—a biocompatible, fluorescent semiconductor created using nanotechnology. The quantum dots emit near-infrared light, with much longer wavelengths that penetrate bone and skin. This allowed the researchers to noninvasively monitor the stem cells for four weeks after transplantation.

Using this in vivo optical imaging technique, Dr Osanai and colleagues were able to see that the injected stem cells entered the brain on the “first pass,” without entering the general circulation. Within three hours, the stem cells began to migrate from the smallest brain blood vessels (capillaries) into the area of brain injury.

After four weeks, rats treated with stem cells had significant recovery of motor function (movement), while untreated rats had no recovery. Examination of the treated brains confirmed that the stem cells had transformed into different types of brain cells and participated in healing of the injured brain area.

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Intra-arterial technique of stem cell transplantation may enhance functional recovery from TBI

Stem cells and heart repair – Video

February 1st, 2012


30-01-2012 06:10 Professor Michael Schneider of Imperial College tells Alan Keys about how stem cell research is leading to treatments for heart disease. Michael describes how the availability of stem cells allows his team to determine the molecules involved in heart cell death and also how to protect those cells from death during a heart attack. Michael foresees a near future where stem cells are combined with other therapies to both repair hearts and enable hearts to self-repair. Alan Keys had his own heart repaired during an operation some years ago and currently chairs a British Heart Foundation patients committee. The British Heart Foundation part-fund the work of Michael’s team at Imperial College. This interview was edited down from the original 35 minutes conversation. Read the transcript here: bit.ly Read more about Michael here: bit.ly and here: bit.ly

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Stem cells and heart repair – Video

Some nerve! Now bypass stem cells

February 1st, 2012

Washington, Feb 1 : Scientists have successfully converted mouse skin cells directly into cells that become the three main parts of the nervous system, bypassing the stem cell stage, throwing up many new possibilities in the medical world.

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Some nerve! Now bypass stem cells

Encouraging results with stem cell transplant for brain injury

February 1st, 2012

Experiments in brain-injured rats show that stem cells injected via the carotid artery travel directly to the brain, where they greatly enhance functional recovery.

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Encouraging results with stem cell transplant for brain injury

Skin Cells as Stem Cells! Medicine's Next Big Thing

February 1st, 2012

SAN FRANCISCO, CA ( Ivanhoe Newswire) — Stem cells, they could hold the key to the treatment and cure of more than 70 major diseases and conditions. A science  lab is taking stem cell technology another step into the future.From broken hearts …

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Skin Cells as Stem Cells! Medicine's Next Big Thing

Stem cells could drive hepatitis research forward

February 1st, 2012

Scientists believe that if they could study liver cells from different people in the lab, they could determine how genetic differences produce these varying responses. However, liver cells are difficult to obtain and notoriously difficult to grow in a lab dish because they tend to lose their normal structure and function when removed from the body.

Now, researchers from MIT, Rockefeller University and the Medical College of Wisconsin have come up with a way to produce liver-like cells from induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPSCs, which are made from body tissues rather than embryos; the liver-like cells can then be infected with hepatitis C. Such cells could enable scientists to study why people respond differently to the infection.

This is the first time that scientists have been able to establish an infection in cells derived from iPSCs — a feat many research teams have been trying to achieve. The new technique, described this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could also eventually enable “personalized medicine”: Doctors could test the effectiveness of different drugs on tissues derived from the patient being treated, and thereby customize therapy for that patient.

The new study is a collaboration between Sangeeta Bhatia, the John and Dorothy Wilson Professor of Health Sciences and Technology and Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT; Charles Rice, a professor of virology at Rockefeller; and Stephen Duncan, a professor of human and molecular genetics at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Stem cells to liver cells

Last year, Bhatia and Rice reported that they could induce liver cells to grow outside the body by growing them on special micropatterned plates that direct their organization. These liver cells can be infected with hepatitis C, but they cannot be used to proactively study the role of genetic variation in viral responses because they come from organs that have been donated for transplantation and represent only a small population.

To make cells with more genetic variation, Bhatia and Rice decided to team up with Duncan, who had shown that he could transform iPSCs into liver-like cells.

Such iPSCs are derived from normal body cells, often skin cells. By turning on certain genes in those cells, scientists can revert them to an immature state that is identical to embryonic stem cells, which can differentiate into any cell type. Once the cells become pluripotent, they can be directed to become liver-like cells by turning on genes that control liver development.

In the current paper, MIT postdoc Robert Schwartz and graduate student Kartik Trehan took those liver-like cells and infected them with hepatitis C. To confirm that infection had occurred, the researchers engineered the viruses to secrete a light-producing protein every time they went through their life cycle.

“This is a very valuable paper because it has never been shown that viral infection is possible” in cells derived from iPSCs, says Karl-Dimiter Bissig, an assistant professor of molecular and cellular biology at Baylor College of Medicine. Bissig, who was not involved in this study, adds that the next step is to show that the cells can become infected with hepatitis C strains other than the one used in this study, which is a rare strain found in Japan. Bhatia’s team is now working toward that goal.

Genetic differences

The researchers’ ultimate goal is to take cells from patients who had unusual reactions to hepatitis C infection, transform those cells into liver cells and study their genetics to see why they responded the way they did. “Hepatitis C virus causes an unusually robust infection in some people, while others are very good at clearing it. It’s not yet known why those differences exist,” Bhatia says.

One potential explanation is genetic differences in the expression of immune molecules such as interleukin-28, a protein that has been shown to play an important role in the response to hepatitis infection. Other possible factors include cells’ expression of surface proteins that enable the virus to enter the cells, and cells’ susceptibility to having viruses take over their replication machinery and other cellular structures.

The liver-like cells produced in this study are comparable to “late fetal” liver cells, Bhatia says; the researchers are now working on generating more mature liver cells.

As a long-term goal, the researchers are aiming for personalized treatments for hepatitis patients. Bhatia says one could imagine taking cells from a patient, making iPSCs, reprogramming them into liver cells and infecting them with the same strain of hepatitis that the patient has. Doctors could then test different drugs on the cells to see which ones are best able to clear the infection.

Provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (news : web)

This story is republished courtesy of MIT News (http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/), a popular site that covers news about MIT research, innovation and teaching.

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Stem cells could drive hepatitis research forward

MIT: Stem cells could drive hepatitis research forward

February 1st, 2012

( Massachusetts Institute of Technology ) Researchers produce liver-like cells from induced pluripotent stem cells. By creating liver-like cells, scientists can study why people respond differently to Hepatitis C.

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MIT: Stem cells could drive hepatitis research forward

Baby Stem Cell Franken-food – Pepsi, Coke, Nestle, Starbucks

February 1st, 2012


30-01-2012 08:31 US: Senomyx’s Fake Flavors www.corpwatch.org China: Businesses Sell Aborted Babies as Stamina Booster Pills www.lifenews.com Pepsi Uses Aborted Fetal Cells In Flavor Enhancers govtslaves.info Products and Companies that use Aborted Fetuses brie-hoffman.hubpages.com Senomyx Website www.senomyx.com

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Baby Stem Cell Franken-food – Pepsi, Coke, Nestle, Starbucks

Creating Cardiac Muscle Cells [Lab Reports]

February 1st, 2012

An international research team from China and the United States has identified a family of molecules that can stimulate stem cells to develop into beating heart muscle cells in zebrafish, making the molecules potential candidates in therapeutic approaches for cardiac regeneration and repair (Ni TT et al.

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Creating Cardiac Muscle Cells [Lab Reports]

Stanford scientists bypass stem cells to create nervous system cells

February 1st, 2012

Bypassing stem cells, mouse skin cells have been converted directly into cells that become the three main parts of the animal's nervous system, according to new research at the Stanford University School of Medicine.

The startling success of this method seems to refute the idea that “pluripotency” — the ability of stem cells to become nearly any cell in the body — is necessary for a cell to transform from one cell type to another.

It raises the possibility that embryonic stem cell research, as well as a related technique called “induced pluripotency,” could be supplanted by a more direct way of generating cells for therapy or research.

“Not only do these cells appear functional in the laboratory, they also seem to be able to integrate … in an animal model,” said lead author and graduate student Ernesto Lujan.

The study was published online Jan. 30 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The finding implies that it may one day be possible to generate a variety of neural-system cells for transplantation that would perfectly match a human patient.

While much research has been devoted to harnessing the potential of embryonic stem cells, taking those cells from an embryo and then implanting them in a patient could prove difficult because they would not match genetically.

The Stanford team is working to replicate the work with skin cells from adult mice and humans.

But Lujan emphasized that

much more research is needed before any human transplantation experiments could be conducted.

In the meantime, however, the ability to quickly and efficiently generate cells — grown in mass quantities in the laboratory, and maintained over time — will be valuable in disease and drug-targeting studies.

Contact Lisa M. Krieger at 408-920-5565.

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Stanford scientists bypass stem cells to create nervous system cells

Stem Cells May Further Hepatitis C Research

February 1st, 2012

TUESDAY, Jan. 31 (HealthDay News) — Using stem cells to create liver-like cells for laboratory research may advance efforts to find out why people respond differently to hepatitis C infection, scientists say.

It's not clear why some people are resistant to hepatitis C, while others are highly susceptible to the infectious disease that can cause liver inflammation and organ failure.

Studying liver cells from various people could reveal genetic factors behind these different responses, but liver cells are difficult to obtain and to grow in a lab dish.

Now, U.S. researchers have found a way to create liver-like cells from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), which are made from body tissues rather than embryos. These liver-like cells can then be infected with hepatitis C.

The research was published Jan. 30 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

It's the first time that scientists have been able to establish an infection in iPSC-derived cells. The technique was developed by a team from MIT, Rockefeller University and the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Along with benefiting hepatitis C research, the new technique may eventually have a role in personalized medicine, the researchers said in a MIT news release. By testing the effectiveness of different drugs on tissues derived from a patient, doctors could customize therapy for that patient, they said.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about hepatitis C.

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Stem Cells May Further Hepatitis C Research

Reverse Aging Discovery thru Stem Cell Research – Video

January 31st, 2012


27-01-2012 10:07 www.insidershealth.com Reverse Aging Fountain of Youth Reversed Aging Stem Cell Research Has the Fountain of Youth been discovered? Is reversed aging really in our future? University of Pittsburgh’s School of Medicine may just have found the answer through a study involving lab mice with a rapid-aging disease. Once the mice received a muscle stem cell injection, the doctors were pleased to find that it reversed the effects of aging in the sick mice! Reverse Aging Fountain of Youth Reversed Aging Stem Cell Research www.insidershealth.com

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Reverse Aging Discovery thru Stem Cell Research – Video

Hopes rise on treating spinal injuries with iPS cells transplant

January 31st, 2012

Untreatable conditions can be helped with reprogrammed adult stem cells

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Hopes rise on treating spinal injuries with iPS cells transplant

Cryogenic storage container for stem cells gets CE Mark for Charter Medical

January 31st, 2012

Medical device firm Charter Medical has received European regulatory clearance for cryogenic stem cell containers.

The CE Mark means that Charter’s cryogenic storage containers for hematopoietic stem cells, the stem cells that form blood and immune cells, can now be marketed in Europe. The containers are designed for cryogenic storage, preservation and transfer of these cells. The containers are already in use by some customers in the United States.

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Cryogenic storage container for stem cells gets CE Mark for Charter Medical

ImmunoCellular Therapeutics To Deliver Presentation on Cancer Stem Cells at Prestigious Immunotherapy Conference

January 31st, 2012

ImmunoCellular Therapeutics, Ltd. , a biotechnology company focused on the development of novel immune-based cancer therapies, today announced that its president and CEO, Manish Singh Ph.D., will be presenting at the Immunotherapeutics Partnering and Deal Making Conference, which will take place in San Diego, California on January 30-31, 2012.

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ImmunoCellular Therapeutics To Deliver Presentation on Cancer Stem Cells at Prestigious Immunotherapy Conference

FASEB SRC Announces Conference Registration Open for: Skeletal Muscle Satellite and Stem Cells

January 31st, 2012

( Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology ) The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology announces the opening of registration for the Science Research Conference: Skeletal Muscle Satellite and Stem Cells.

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FASEB SRC Announces Conference Registration Open for: Skeletal Muscle Satellite and Stem Cells

StemCells, Inc. Announces Publication of Preclinical Data Demonstrating Its Human Neural Stem Cells Preserve Vision

January 31st, 2012

NEWARK, Calif. — StemCells, Inc. today announced the publication of preclinical data demonstrating that its proprietary HuCNS-SC(R) cells (purified human neural stem cells) protect host photoreceptors …

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StemCells, Inc. Announces Publication of Preclinical Data Demonstrating Its Human Neural Stem Cells Preserve Vision

ThermoGenesis Announces Management Transition in Conjunction With Tactical Realignment of Company

January 31st, 2012

RANCHO CORDOVA, Calif., Jan. 30, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — ThermoGenesis Corp. (NASDAQ: KOOL – News), a leading supplier of innovative products and services that process and store adult stem cells, today announced …

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ThermoGenesis Announces Management Transition in Conjunction With Tactical Realignment of Company

Stem cells may shed light on hepatitis, MIT researchers find

January 31st, 2012

Researchers at MIT and their colleagues said they have devised a way to produce liver-like cells from stem cells, a key step in studying why people respond differently to Hepatitis C.

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Stem cells may shed light on hepatitis, MIT researchers find







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