Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Reverse Aging in Mice - A Fountain Of Youth?

A medical breakthroughs involving mice was published online by the journal Nature on November 28 and provides the first compelling evidence of aging’s reversal — not just delay — in a high-level organism, according to the following article. By tweaking enzymes that prevent chromosome tips from unraveling, researchers have shown age-related tissue degeneration can be reversed in some mice. This would really be very exciting as it marks for the first time, the possibility of actually stopping and reversing the visible signs of aging.
    . . .  June

------------------------------
Telomere Tweaks Reverse Aging in Mice
Wired Science | Wired.com:

By tweaking enzymes that prevent chromosome tips from unraveling, researchers have shown age-related tissue degeneration can be reversed in some mice.

Medical breakthroughs involving mice must be taken with rock-sized grains of salt because, despite their superficial genetic similarity, rodents are a very long way from humans. The latest findings, published online by the journal Nature on November 28, are no exception. Nevertheless, they provide the first compelling evidence of aging’s reversal — not just delay — in a high-level organism.

The work represents an “unprecedented reversal of age-related decline in the central nervous system and other organs vital to adult mammalian health,” wrote the team led by Ronald DePinho, a cancer geneticist at Harvard Medical School.

The researchers genetically engineered mice to lack telomerase, the key enzyme ingredient in structures called telomeres that cap the tips of chromosomes and prevent them from fraying. In healthy mammals, telomeres shorten slightly with each round of cell division and such shortening is linked to a variety of age-related disorders.

DePinho’s telomerase-less mice tended to be prematurely aged and infertile with small brains, damaged intestines and poor senses of smell. Four weeks after the researchers gave them a drug designed to stimulate telomerase production, however, these visible signs of aging had reversed.

In a press release, DePinho described the transformation as “akin to a Ponce de León effect,” referring to the 16th century conquistador’s search for a fountain of youth.

It may be a premature choice of phrase. Before speculation on human applications can even begin, the researchers need to determine whether telomerase activation works for “normal” mice, and not just a single strain genetically engineered to age prematurely.


Read entire article


-----------------

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

HUMAN BLOOD Can now Be Created out of Skin Cells?

 This is really exciting!.Canadian scientists have transformed bits of human skin into human blood  - a major medical breakthrough that could yield new sources of blood for transfusions according to the article below. They even generated multiple different blood-cell types — oxygen-ferrying red blood cells, infection-fighting white blood cells, cells that make platelets needed for healing and more. Wow!
    . . . June

--------------------------
Canadian scientists transform human skin into blood
By Sharon Kirkey, Postmedia News November 7, 2010

"Canadian scientists have transformed pinches of human skin into petri dishes of human blood — a major medical breakthrough that could yield new sources of blood for transfusions after cancer treatments or surgery.

The discovery, by researchers at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont., could one day potentially allow anyone needing blood after multiple rounds of surgery or chemotherapy, or for blood disorders such as anemia, to have a backup supply of blood created from a tiny patch of their own skin — eliminating the risk of their body’s immune system rejecting blood from a donor.

Researchers predict the lab-grown blood could be ready for testing in humans within two years.
The achievement, published Sunday in the journal Nature, raises the possibility of personalizing blood production for patients for the first time.

"This is a very important discovery. I think it represents a seminal contribution" to the rapidly evolving field of stem-cell research, said Michael Rudnicki, scientific director of the Canadian Stem Cell Network and director of the Regenerative Medicine Program at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute.

"That one can play with the fate of a cell and force it sideways into something that it doesn’t at all resemble, and then being able to use it, is tremendously exciting."

The procedure is also relatively simple. It involves taking a small piece of skin just centimetres in size, which would require only a stitch to close, extracting fibroblasts — abundant cells in the skin that make up the connective tissue and give skin its flexibility — and bathing them in growth factors in a petri dish. Next, by adding a single protein that binds to DNA and acts as an on/off switch, the researchers turned on or off some 2,000 genes and reprogrammed the skin cells to differentiate or morph into millions of blood progenitors — the cells the produce blood.

They generated multiple different blood-cell types — oxygen-ferrying red blood cells, infection-fighting white blood cells, cells that make platelets needed for healing, and macrophages, the garbage trucks of the blood system that swallow and break down foreign material.

Read More



------------------


Creating human blood from skin reads more like a futuristic comic book - but it's actually happening. Maybe we won't need to have these ethical battles about stem cells after all. What do you think the next medical discovery will be?  Leave a comment.


June


------------------------

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

More Money Required For STEM CELL Research in Canada?

Stem cells are critical for regenerative medicine, medicine that involves growing new cells, tissues or organs, according to the article below. Stem cell therapies are being used to treat a number of diseases including leukemia and some immune disorders and experimental procedures are being done for other illnesses. The writer suggests that unless the government spends a lot more in this area, then Canada will fall behind other countries in this research.
    . . . June

----------------
Canada's mantle as stem-cell leader fading, experts warn:

OTTAWA — Canada has been a world-renowned leader in stem cell research but is now falling behind and its international reputation is at risk unless major investments are made in the rapidly evolving field, researchers warned parliamentarians Tuesday.

Canada first discovered stem cells, the precursors of all cells in the body, 50 years ago and, until recently, was at the forefront of research, MPs on the House of Commons health committee heard Tuesday from leading experts in the field. Funding is drying up, however, and Canada is quickly being overtaken by other jurisdictions which are spending massive amounts of money because they consider stem cell research the future of medicine.

"Stem cell research is an area which Canada has pioneered, has led the world, and we've got the talent, the will and the expertise to continue to do so," said Dr. Drew Lyall, chair of the Canadian Stem Cell Foundation. "It's simply not realistic to expect Canada, or indeed anyone else, to keep up to remain globally competitive in the long-term without some further dedicated investment in the field."

Lyall and other witnesses testifying before the committee, noted that the state of California alone, is investing $3 billion over a 10-year period in stem cell research projects. The entire country of Canada is investing nowhere near that amount, he said.

Stem cells are critical for regenerative medicine, medicine that involves growing new cells, tissues or organs. Stem cell therapies are being used to treat a number of diseases including leukemia and some immune disorders and experimental procedures are being done for other illnesses.

Stem cell therapies are considered to hold great promise for treating Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, arthritis, diabetes, hemophilia and spinal cord injuries.

Read more:

-----------------

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Possible Stem Cell Repository For Bio-Matrix Scientific Group

 According to the following article, Bio-Matrix Scientific Group Inc. announced that the company has entered into discussions with several organizations regarding the establishment of adult stem cell repositories at the company's 15,000 sq. ft. facility and see opportunities in areas including cancer stem cells, adult stem cell storage for future therapeutic usage and tumor banking for establishing cell lines for cancer research.Go for it!
    . . . June


-------------------  
Bio-Matrix Scientific Group in Discussions on Possible Stem Cell Repository Ventures
MarketWatch:   SAN DIEGO, Oct 4, 2010 (GlobeNewswire via COMTEX)

Bio-Matrix Scientific Group Inc. announced today the company has entered into discussions with several organizations regarding the establishment of adult stem cell repositories at the company's 15,000 sq. ft. facility.

Chairman & CEO David Koos commented about these recent developments, stating, 'The company has recently been approached by several entities seeking to develop adult stem cell repositories that dovetail into their overall business models.

We see opportunities in working with organizations in areas including cancer stem cells, adult stem cell storage for future therapeutic usage and tumor banking for establishing cell lines for cancer research. I do see potential for initiation of these repositories in the near term.'

A spokesperson for BMSN stated the company believes the rapid growth of stem cell therapies combined with the lack of immediate stem cell availability for use in these therapies have been major factors contributing to the recent inquiries received by the company from entities wishing to explore establishing repositories at the company's facility.

Read entire article

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Government Funding Of Embryonic Stem Cell Research Can Continue For Now

 According to the article below, An appeals court ruled Tuesday that government funding of embryonic stem cell research can continue for now. Researchers hope one day to use stem cells in ways that cure spinal cord injuries, Parkinson's disease and other ailments. Opponents say the research is a form of abortion because human embryos must be destroyed to obtain the stem cells. There really are two sides to this issue. the court will decide.
   . . . June


---------------
 Court OKs US-funded stem cell research for now
Yahoo! News:

WASHINGTON – An appeals court ruled Tuesday that government funding of embryonic stem cell research can continue for now.

The U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington granted the Obama administration's request to allow the funding from the National Institutes of Health while it appeals a judge's order blocking the research.

The administration had argued that stopping the research while the case proceeds would irreparably harm scientific progress toward potentially lifesaving medical treatment.

U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth had blocked President Barack Obama's research funding guidelines because he said it's likely they violate the law against federal funding of embryo destruction.

A three-judge panel of the appeals court issued an unusually quick decision, a day after hearing arguments over whether the funding could continue while it considers the case. The court also said it would expedite the case.

Researchers hope one day to use stem cells in ways that cure spinal cord injuries, Parkinson's disease and other ailments. Opponents say the research is a form of abortion because human embryos must be destroyed to obtain the stem cells.

A 1996 law prohibits the use of taxpayer dollars in work that harms an embryo, so batches have been culled using private money. But those batches can reproduce in lab dishes indefinitely, and Obama administration issued rules permitting taxpayer dollars to be used in work with the already created batches.

The administration thus expanded the number of stem cell lines created with private money that federally funded scientists could research, up from the 21 that President George W. Bush had allowed to 75 so far.

"President Obama made expansion of stem cell research and the pursuit of groundbreaking treatments and cures a top priority when he took office," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said in a statement after the ruling. "We're heartened that the court will allow NIH and their grantees to continue moving forward while the appeal is resolved.

Read entire article

---------------------------

Thursday, September 23, 2010

New Adult Stem Cells Could Speed Progress in Regenerative Medicine

According to the following article, researchers at the University at Buffalo have engineered adult stem cells that scientists can grow continuously in culture, a discovery that could speed development of cost-effective treatments for diseases including heart disease, diabetes, immune disorders and neurodegenerative diseases. This is a really exciting development, because it eliminates the controversy about embryonic stem cells.
    . . . June


-------- 

Researchers Engineer Adult Stem Cells That Do Not Age, Overcoming a Major Barrier to Progress in Regenerative Medicine:
http://nextbigfuture.com

Biomedical researchers at the University at Buffalo have engineered adult stem cells that scientists can grow continuously in culture, a discovery that could speed development of cost-effective treatments for diseases including heart disease, diabetes, immune disorders and neurodegenerative diseases.

UB scientists created the new cell lines – named "MSC Universal" – by genetically altering mesenchymal stem cells, which are found in bone marrow and can differentiate into cell types including bone, cartilage, muscle, fat, and beta-pancreatic islet cells.

Lee says his research team has generated two lines of MSC-Universal cells: a human line and a porcine line. Using the engineering technique he and colleagues developed, scientists can generate an MSC-Universal line from any donor sample of mesenchymal stem cells, he says.

"I imagine that if these cells become routinely used in the future, one can generate a line from each ethnic group for each gender for people to choose from," Lee says.

The researchers say the breakthrough overcomes a frustrating barrier to progress in the field of regenerative medicine: The difficulty of growing adult stem cells for clinical applications.

Because mesenchymal stem cells have a limited life span in laboratory cultures, scientists and doctors who use the cells in research and treatments must continuously obtain fresh samples from bone marrow donors, a process both expensive and time-consuming. In addition, mesenchymal stem cells from different donors can vary in performance.

The cells that UB researchers modified show no signs of aging in culture, but otherwise appear to function as regular mesenchymal stem cells do – including by conferring therapeutic benefits in an animal study of heart disease. Despite their propensity to proliferate in the laboratory, MSC-Universal cells did not form tumors in animal testing.

Read More . . .

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Could Heart Attack Victims Benefit From Non-embryonic Stem Cells?

This is very exciting . Mohammed Gaballa Ph.D., is a cardiologist, Scientist and engineer.  He was trying to figure out how to fix the scar tissue from a heart attack. Now, Gaballa seemingly is within reach of a viable solution with his most recent research involving non-embryonic stem cells — from the patient’s own heart. That would definitely solve the controversy of using embryonic stem cells.
   . . . June


--------------------------------- 

SHRI cardiologist taps into cell research
Sun City West, Sun City Grand, Surprise, Glendale, Peoria, El Mirage, Youngtown: Topstory:

It’s not often that someone bases a life-altering decision on a television program.

Then again, Mohamed Gaballa, Ph.D., isn’t just anybody.

At the time, Gaballa – now director of Banner Sun Health Research Institute’s Center for Cardiovascular Research — was a student in his 20s, working on a doctorate thesis for aerospace and mechanical engineering, when a heart-disease program caught his eye.

“What struck me then is that they were trying to treat the symptoms because there is no cure,” he recalled. “And I thought, ‘Hmm … we can send a man to the moon, but we can’t fix that?’ Something had to be done.”
. . . . . . . .

When the heart is not pumping at its full capacity, Gaballa said, the kidney blood flow is alerted, causing the release of a protein called renin and setting off a domino effect of activities resulting in production of the vasoconstrictor angiotensin II.

While the body’s natural response is not problematic in the case of a momentary decrease in blood pressure, it can prove catastrophic to an individual with existing heart issues. In that instance, constricting the blood vessels puts additional strain on the heart muscle and can cause further damage. ACE inhibitors keep angiotensin II from being produced, thus alleviating pressure on an already overworked and underpowered heart.

“But it doesn’t solve the problem,” Gaballa added. “It is not a cure, it does not rebuild the heart, and you still can’t run up stairs or do things you used to do.”

As he learned more about genetically based diseases, gene therapy seemed the next logical step.

“If you go in and can successfully replace the abnormal gene with a working gene, it stands to reason you will eradicate disease,” he said.

One segment of Gaballa’s research involved introducing a functional gene into one’s system using a virus. Just as with influenza, the virus would be transmitted from one subject to the next, invading red blood cells.

“It worked,” he said. “However, you cannot treat heart disease this way. Just as a flu virus will only last so long before your (white) cells recognize it is foreign and attack it, so it is the same. After a 21-day cycle, it will have exited your system.”

So, once again, the scientist and engineer had to take a step back in order to examine the whole.

“The Holy Grail of cardiology is trying to figure out how to fix that scar tissue,” he said. “So far, there is no way to heal or rebuild it.”

Now, Gaballa seemingly is within reach of a viable solution with his most recent research involving non-embryonic stem cells — from the patient’s own heart.

Using a minuscule snip of cardiac tissue from an excision of the heart patient’s right atrium, Gaballa’s goal is to isolate the stem, or progenitor, cells and increase their number before implanting back into the patient’s heart to repair the damaged muscle tissue.

Healthy cells collected from the tissue excision are treated with a digestive enzyme and put in a culture medium in a climate- and pH-controlled environment mirroring that of the human body. As the cells begin to multiply, they exit the in vitro medium and band together, forming a cluster.

As we age, Gaballa said, our cells do not regenerate as quickly. For a heart patient between ages of 55 and 75, he estimated it would take approximately three to four weeks for the in vitro cell-regeneration process to occur before the healthy cell cluster is ready to be reintroduced to the host’s heart.

“I am very encouraged by my current research, because it most closely mirrors nature,” he said. “We’re just facilitating the process.”

Banner Boswell Medical Center CEO Dave Cheney said he believes the scientist’s investigations are heading in a direction that will produce health and economic benefits far beyond the reach of the West Valley.

Read the entire article . . .

Friday, September 10, 2010

US resumes funding controversial stem cell research

 According to the article below, a US appeals court on Thursday granted an Obama administration request to temporarily lift a judge's ban on federal funding of research involving human embryonic stem cells. That means the for the time being at least, they can resume work on controversial human embryonic stem cell research. More legal action is pending.
    . . . June


------------------------

US resumes funding controversial stem cell research
The Economic Times:

WASHINGTON: The US government said it was resuming work on controversial human embryonic stem cell research on Friday after an appeals court ruled in its favor.

In the latest legal back-and-forth on the issue, a US appeals court on Thursday granted an Obama administration request to temporarily lift a judge's ban on federal funding of research involving human embryonic stem cells.

More legal action is pending but the National Institutes of Health said it would resume work that had been suspended. 'We are pleased with the court's interim ruling, which will allow promising stem cell research to continue while we present further arguments to the court in the weeks to come,' the NIH said in a statement.

"With the temporary stay in place, NIH has resumed intramural research and will continue its consideration of grants that were frozen by the preliminary injunction on August 23. The suspension of all grants, contracts, and applications that involve the use of human embryonic stem cells has been temporarily lifted," it added.

The three-judge panel of the appeals court said in its brief order on Thursday that it put on hold the judge's ban while it considers the merits of the administration's emergency request for a stay of his injunction. US District Judge Royce Lamberth ruled last month that the research violated U.S. law because it involved destroying human embryos.

The ruling was a setback for President Barack Obama, who had tried to expand the research. The appeals court ordered that briefs be filed by Sept 20. It then will have to decide whether its temporary administrative stay should be extended or ended.

Read on . . .


Monday, September 6, 2010

Balzan prize Won By Japanese Stem Cell Researcher

 If adult cells could take on the characteristics of embryonic stem cells, then the moral issue wouldn't arise. According to the article below, that's what this Japanese researcher has discovered and it won him the Balzan Prize for biology.
   . . . June


-----------------------------


Japanese stem cell researcher wins Balzan prize
COLLEEN BARRY The Associated Press Mon, Sep. 6, 2010

AP | 09/06/2010: "MILAN - A Japanese researcher who found a way to give adults cells certain characteristics of embryonic stem cells, a process scientists say could eventually lead to cures for spinal cord injuries and other ailments, has been awarded the Balzan Prize for biology.

Shinya Yamanaka's prize is one of four , two for sciences, two in humanities , awarded this year by the foundation, with the goal of highlighting new or emerging areas of research and to sustain fields of study that may have been overlooked elsewhere.

Also winning awards were Brazilian mathematician Jacob Palis, who was cited for his contributions to the theory of dynamical systems, which draws from chaos theory and the butterfly effect, or the idea that small differences can create huge changes.

The humanities prizes go to Italian historian Carlo Ginzburg, the father of microhistory, the study of the past based on a focus on the small scale, for his contributions to the study of ordinary people in Europe, and to German Manfred Bauneck for his history of the European theater.

Yamanaka has used its finding to treat spinal chord lesions in mice, though the process has not so far been applied in humans, said Nicole Le Douarin, an honorary professor at the College de France who has written a book on stem cells, and who presented the citation.
The process allows adult cells that have already been differentiated into, say, kidney cells or neural cells, be transformed back into cells with the characteristics of embryonic cells , a breakthrough that could provide an alternative to the controversial use of human embryos in stem cell research.

Read More

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Is Stem-Cell Research Put On Hold Permanently?

 I feel that stem cell research is a very important part of our health system. I agree that there is a moral issue, particularly if the stem cells are collected for that purpose, but there is a huge opportunity to advance our medical knowledge in so many ways. Until such time as we can artificially supply this type of duplicating cell, then I think we should be advancing into this area aggresively.
   . . . June


--------------------

American Society For Biochemistry And Molecular Biology Reacts To Stem-Cell Ruling
Posted on: Friday, 3 September 2010, 14:41 CDT 

 Science News - redOrbit: "The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology expressed its disapproval and disappointment this week in response to the Aug. 23 ruling in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia that granted a preliminary injunction barring federal funding of embryonic stem-cell research.

In a statement, the society said the decision, which came in response to a lawsuit filed by two adult stem-cell researchers, effectively halts human embryonic stem-cell research in the United States and 'represents a crossroads in American scientific policy.'

The society, which represents more than 12,000 scientists in both academia and industry worldwide, urged Congress to act swiftly to pass legislation that will restore federal funding to embryonic stem-cell researchers as to not further delay 'potential medical cures for millions of sick Americans.'

Meanwhile, the society said the ruling undercuts the "gold standard" peer-review process by allowing the merits of research projects to be determined by those on the judicial bench instead of those working at the laboratory bench: "Funding of basic biomedical research is not a zero-sum game in which particular lines of research are supported at the expense of others; rather, the system has evolved so that each proposal is evaluated on both its merits and its future benefits for easing the burden of disease."
The peer-review process "is by nature competitive," the statement said, and has "resulted in new biomedical methodologies and technologies that continue to benefit society at large."

Read More . . .