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From stem cells to billions of human insulin-producing …

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:47 pm

Harvard stem cell researchers today announced that they have made a giant leap forward in the quest to find a truly effective treatment for type 1 diabetes, a condition that affects an estimated 3 million Americans at a cost of about $15 billion annually:

With human embryonic stem cells as a starting point, the scientists are for the first time able to produce, in the kind of massive quantities needed for cell transplantation and pharmaceutical purposes, human insulin-producing beta cells equivalent in most every way to normally functioning beta cells.

Doug Melton, who led the work and who 23 years ago, when his then infant son Sam was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, dedicated his career to finding a cure for the disease, said he hopes to have human transplantation trials using the cells to be underway within a few years.

We are now just one pre-clinical step away from the finish line, said Melton, whose daughter Emma also has type 1 diabetes.

A report on the new work has today been published by the journal Cell.

Felicia W. Pagliuca, Jeff Millman, and Mads Gurtler of Meltons lab are co-first authors on the Cell paper. The research group and paper authors include a Harvard undergraduate.

You never know for sure that something like this is going to work until youve tested it numerous ways, said Melton, Harvards Xander University Professor and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. Weve given these cells three separate challenges with glucose in mice and theyve responded appropriately; that was really exciting.

It was gratifying to know that we could do something that we always thought was possible, he continued, but many people felt it wouldnt work. If we had shown this was not possible, then I would have had to give up on this whole approach. Now Im really energized.

The stem cell-derived beta cells are presently undergoing trials in animal models, including non-human primates, Melton said.

Elaine Fuchs, the Rebecca C. Lancefield Professor at Rockefeller University, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator who is not involved in the work, hailed it as one of the most important advances to date in the stem cell field, and I join the many people throughout the world in applauding my colleague for this remarkable achievement.

For decades, researchers have tried to generate human pancreatic beta cells that could be cultured and passaged long term under conditions where they produce insulin. Melton and his colleagues have now overcome this hurdle and opened the door for drug discovery and transplantation therapy in diabetes, Fuchs said.

And Jose Oberholzer, MD, Associate Professor of Surgery, Endocrinology and Diabetes, and Bioengineering at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and its Director of the Islet and Pancreas Transplant Program and the Chief of the Division of Transplantation, said work described in todays Cell will leave a dent in the history of diabetes. Doug Melton has put in a life-time of hard work in finding a way of generating human islet cells in vitro. He made it. This is a phenomenal accomplishment.

Melton, co-scientific director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, and the Universitys Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology both of which were created more than a decade after he began his quest said that when he told his son and daughter they were surprisingly calm. I think like all kids, they always assumed that if I said Id do this, Id do it, he said with a self-deprecating grin.

Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune metabolic condition in which the body kills off all the pancreatic beta cells that produce the insulin needed for glucose regulation in the body. Thus the final pre-clinical step in the development of a treatment involves protecting from immune system attack the approximately 150 million cells that would have to be transplanted into each patient being treated. Melton is collaborating on the development of an implantation device to protect the cells with Daniel G. Anderson, the Samuel A. Goldblith Professor of Applied Biology, Associate Professor in theDepartment of Chemical Engineering, the Institute of Medical Engineering and Science, and the Koch Institute at MIT.

Melton said that the device Anderson and his colleagues at MIT are currently testing has thus far protected beta cells implanted in mice from immune attack for many months. They are still producing insulin, Melton said.

Cell transplantation as a treatment for diabetes is still essentially experimental, uses cells from cadavers, requires the use of powerful immunosuppressive drugs, and has been available to only a very small number of patients.

MITs Anderson said the new work by Meltons lab is anincrediblyimportant advance for diabetes. There is no question that ability to generate glucose-responsive, human beta cells through controlled differentiation of stem cells will accelerate the development of new therapeutics. In particular, this advance opens to doors toan essentially limitless supply oftissue for diabetic patients awaiting cell therapy."

RichardA.Insel, MD, chief scientific officer of the JDRF, a funder of Meltons work, said the JDRF is thrilled with thisadvancementtoward large scale production of mature, functional human beta cells by Dr. Melton and his team. This significant accomplishmenthas the potentialto serve as a cell source for islet replacement in people with type 1 diabetes and mayprovide a resource for discovery of beta cell therapies that promote survival or regeneration of beta cells and development of screening biomarkers to monitor beta cell health and survival to guidetherapeutic strategies for all stages of the disease.

Melton expressed gratitude to both the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation and the Helmsley Charitable Trust, saying their support has been, and continues to be essential. I also need to thank Howard and Stella Heffron, whose faith in our vision got this work underway, and helped get us where we are today.

While diabetics can keep their glucose metabolism under general control by injecting insulin multiple times a day, that does not provide the kind of exquisite fine tuning necessary to properly control metabolism, and that lack of control leads to devastating complications from blindness to loss of limbs.

About 10 percent of the more than 26 million Americans living with type 2 diabetes are also dependent upon insulin injections, and would presumably be candidates for beta cell transplants, Melton said.

There have been previous reports of other labs deriving beta cell types from stem cells, no other group has produced mature beta cells as suitable for use in patients, he said. The biggest hurdle has been to get to glucose sensing, insulin-secreting beta cells, and thats what our group has done.

In addition to the institutions and individual cited above, the work was funded by the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, the National Institutes of Health, and the JPB Foundation.

Cited: Pagliuca, F., Millman, J. and Grtler, M, et. al. Generation of functional human pancreatic beta cells in vitro. Cell. October 9, 2014.

Dr. Melton has made an author's proof available. Click here to download the PDF.

The beginning shows a spinner flask containing red culture media and cells, the cells being too small to see. Inside the flask you can see a magnetic stir bar and the flask is being placed on top of a magnetic stirrer.

This is followed by a time cours
e series of images, magnified, showing how cells tart of as single cells and then grow very quickly into clusters over the next few days. The size of the clusters is the same as the size of human islets at the end.

The final image shows 6 flasks, enough for 6 patients, spinning away. If you look closely, you can see particles spinning around, the white dust or dots are clusters of cells, each containing about 1000 cells.

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From stem cells to billions of human insulin-producing ...

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MD Stem Cells

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:47 pm

MD Stem Cells and Stem Cell Treatments

MD Stem Cellsis aconsultancy providing information, education, facilitationand access to advanced Stem Cell and Alternative Medicine treatments in the United States and Europe. We are now Collaborator and Study Director for the Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study- SCOTS - the largest and most comprehensive stem cell eye study registered with the National Institutes of Health. Please see the NIH website http://www.clinicaltrials.gov Identifier NCT 01920867. SCOTS is now recruiting and accepting patients.

Conditions eligible for the SCOTS trial include retinal diseases such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD), myopic macular degeneration, hereditary retinopathies such as Retinitis Pigmentosa and Stargardts, as well as selected inflammatory, vascular and traumatic conditions. Optic nerve diseases considered eligible include glaucoma, ischemic optic neuropathy, optic atrophy, optic neuritis and some trauma. The study is focused on the ocular tissue that has sustained damage and its potential for improvement rather than a specific disease entity.

MD Stem Cells and its staff do not provide medical evaluation, diagnosis, advice or treatment but rather act to connect interested patients with leading physicians and centers of excellence. We encourage you to carefully review the material presented and, should you have interest, complete the Contact Us form and we will be in touch shortly.

Disclaimer: The Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study or SCOTS is an open label, non-randomized efficacy study and no guarantees of specific improvements or visual results are being made. Any medical procedure carries risks as well as potential benefits. The SCOTS study has different treatment arms and our principle investigator assigns patients to minimize risk and maximize potential benefit. Depending on the arm chosen the risk of potential complications has been calculated to be from approximately 0.0008% to 5%.

Disclaimer: The Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study or SCOTS is an open label, non-randomized efficacy study and no guarantees of specific improvements or visual results are being made. Any medical procedure carries risks as well as potential benefits. The SCOTS study has different treatment arms and our principle investigator assigns patients to minimize risk and maximal potential benefit. Depending on the arm chosen the risk of potential complications has been calculated to be from approximately 0.0008% to 5%. - See more at: http://www.mdstemcells.com/SCOTSQuestionsonstemcells.html#sthash.VO6wDC9d.dpuf

Disclaimer: The Stem Cell Ophthalmology Treatment Study or SCOTS is an open label, non-randomized efficacy study and no guarantees of specific improvements or visual results are being made. Any medical procedure carries risks as well as potential benefits. The SCOTS study has different treatment arms and our principle investigator assigns patients to minimize risk and maximal potential benefit. Depending on the arm chosen the risk of potential complications has been calculated to be from approximately 0.0008% to 5%. - See more at: http://www.mdstemcells.com/SCOTSQuestionsonstemcells.html#sthash.VO6wDC9d.dpu

MD Stem Cells 412 Main Street, Suite I Ridgefield, CT 06877 USA Tel:203-423-9494 Fax: 203-905-6800 Email: info@mdstemcells.com

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USF Health News Stem cells help repair traumatic brain …

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:47 pm

University of South Florida researchers have suggested a new view of how stem cells may help repair the brain following trauma. In a series of preclinical experiments, they report that transplanted cells appear to build a biobridge that links an uninjured brain site where new neural stem cells are born with the damaged region of the brain.

Their findings were recently reported online in the peer-reviewed journal PLOS ONE.

The transplanted stem cells serve as migratory cues for the brains own neurogenic cells, guiding theexodus of these newly formed host cells from their neurogenic niche towards the injured brain tissue,said principal investigator Cesar Borlongan, PhD,professor and director of the USF Center for Aging and Brain Repair.

A team led by Cesar Borlongan, director of the University of South Florida Center for Aging and Brain Repair, offers a new concept for how transplanted stem cells help prod the brains own repair mechanism following traumatic brain injury.

Based in part on the data reported by the USF researchers in this preclinical study, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently approved a limited clinical trial to transplant SanBio Incs SB632 cells (an adult stem cell therapy) in patients with traumatic brain injury.

Stem cells are undifferentiated, or blank, cells with the potential to give rise to many different cell types that carry out different functions. While the stem cells in adult bone marrow or umbilical cord blood tend to develop into the cells that make up the organ system from which they originated, these multipotent stem cells can be manipulated to take on the characteristics of neural cells.

To date, there have been two widely-held views on how stem cells may work to provide potential treatments for brain damage caused by injury or neurodegenerative disorders. One school of thought is that stem cells implanted into the brain directly replace dead or dying cells. The other, more recent view is that transplanted stem cells secrete growth factors that indirectly rescue the injured tissue.

The USF study presents evidence for a third concept of stem-cell mediated brain repair.

The researchers randomly assigned rats with traumatic brain injury and confirmed neurological impairment to one of two groups. One group received transplants of bone marrow-derived stem cells (SB632 cells) into the region of the brain affected by traumatic injury. The other (control group) received a sham procedure in which solution alone was infused into the brain with no implantation of stem cells.

At one and three months post-TBI, the rats receiving stem cell transplants showed significantly better motor and neurological function and reduced brain tissue damage compared to rats receiving no stem cells. These robust improvements were observed even though survival of the transplanted cells was modest and diminished over time.

The researchers then conducted a series of experiments to examine the host brain tissue.

At three months post-traumatic brain injury, the brains of transplanted rats showed massive cell proliferation and differentiation of stem cells into neuron-like cells in the area of injury, the researchers found. This was accompanied by a solid stream of stem cells migrating from the brains uninjured subventricular zone a region where many new stem cells are formed to the brains site of injury.

In contrast, the rats receiving solution alone showed limited proliferation and neural-commitment of stem cells, with only scattered migration to the site of brain injury and virtually no expression of newly formed cells in the subventricular zone. Without the addition of transplanted stem cells, the brains self-repair process appeared insufficient to mount a defense against the cascade of traumatic brain injury-induced cell death.

The researchers conclude that the transplanted stem cells create a neurovascular matrix that bridges the long-distance gap between the region in the brain where host neural stem cells arise and the site of injury. This pathway, or biobridge, ferries the newly emerging host cells to the specific place in the brain in need of repair, helping promote functional recovery from traumatic brain injury.

Article citation:Stem Cell Recruitment of Newly Formed Host Cells via a Successful Seduction? Filling the Gap between Neurogenic Niche and Injured Brain Site; Naoki Tajiri, Yuji Kaneko, Kazutaka Shinozuka, Hiroto Ishikawa, Ernest Yankee, Michael McGrogan, Casey Case, and Cesar V. Borlongan; PLOS ONE 8(9): e74857. Published Sept. 4, 2013.

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Stem Cells – Eppendorf

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:47 pm

Cultivation & Storage

Our cell culture consumables with tissue culture (TC)-treated surface allow optimal attachment and homogeneous growth of stem cells. The New Brunswick CO2 incubators provide the ideal environment for growing stem cells in culture. The speed adjustment of our Easypet helps to handle cells very carefully and precisely.

For transfection of cells, e.g. for reprogramming, Eppendorf offers a broad range of manipulation devices. A variety of general lab equipment is available to facilitate the set-up, starting with manual or automated pipetting devices and centrifuges that fit your needs.

Our Mastercyclers guarantee convenient and extremely fast PCR runs. In addition the gradient function can be used to optimize the PCR condition very easily and establish reliable protocols. With the Detection equipment further analysis such as UV/Vis absorption or fluorescence detection can be conducted.

Controlled bioreactors can be the key to establish and optimize reproducible cultivation processes and to scale up from T-flasks and plates. The Eppendorf DASbox and DASGIP Parallel Bioreactor Systems offer precisely controlled environments for stem cell cultivation.

Our single-use bioreactors with working volumes of up to 40 L enable clinical-scale production of stem cells and facilitate validation. New Brunswick BioCommand SCADA Software can be chosen with security, event logs, and audit-trail capabilities to be compatible with the FDA 21 CFR Part 11 requirements.

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BMAC Stem Cells | Prolotherapy, RIT, Orthopedic Medicine …

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:46 pm

Bone marrow aspirate concentrate (BMAC) is a source of non-controversial active stem cells. Your own stem cells can be used to assist your body in the repair of degenerated tissue, with zero risk of rejection or disease transmission. BMAC must be injected in a precise fashion to be best utilized in joints with arthritis. Dr. Tallman has pioneered specialized needle manipulation techniques specifically for the use of BMAC.

Dr. Tallman has designed a virtually painless BMAC extraction technique that is performed in-office, taking approximately 10 minutes to complete. There is no downtime and only minimal temporary soreness has been reported in the extraction area. The liquid marrow is gently aspirated from the PSIS (back of the ilium bone: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iliac_crest) with a special needle, and the extracted marrow is then placed into a disposable cell separator where it is centrifuged for 15 minutes. After this, it is immediately available for injection. It is helpful with knee, shoulder, ankle, wrist, hip and elbow conditions.

Bone marrow aspirate concentrate stem cells vs. adipose derived stem cells:

Bone is the only tissue in the body capable of returning to 100% of original strength when injured. Only 30-60cc of liquid bone marrow is required for the BMAC procedure and it replenishes itself within days to a couple of weeks. BMAC procedures can be performed on a virtually unlimited basis, without side effects. Stem cells from BMAC are the active stem cells that the body has intended for immediate functional use.

BMAC stem cell devices are FDA-approved and the cells are harvested from your own body. BMAC has already been used safely in millions of medical and surgical procedures worldwide. Dr. Tallman only uses BMAC kits made in America. They are totally readministered during your visit and our office does not manipulate or store the cells in any way.

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Dr Izolda Heydenrych | Dermatologist | Cosmetic …

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:46 pm

Specialising in cosmetic procedures using the latest dermatological techniques and aesthetic treatments.

With years of experience in laser technology and cosmetic dermatology, Dr Ean Smit and Dr Izolda Heydenrych founded The Cosmetic Dermatology Centre. At the Cosmetic Dermatology Centre, we believe that in order to offer safe and effective treatments, a variety of lasers and other equipment needs to be available to the public.

CDC is therefore able to offer he very latest in revolutionary technologies, including therapy (Skin tightening), Fraxel laser (Skin rejuvenating treatments and complexion blending), Laser hair removal, Vascular laser, Botox and Fillers, Photodynamic Therapy, Mole-mapping and treatment of Hyperhidrosis.

Under the supervision and expertise of our Dermatologists, Cosmetic Dermatology Centre has highly trained therapists and laser operators who assist in treating a wide range of skin disorders and concerns regarding skin health.

Dr Izolda Heydenrych specializes in Filler and Botox and has a special interest in Mole-Mapping and treatment of actinic damage and skin cancer. She lectures on a wide range of topics and is regularly involved in giving workshops and training in cosmetic procedures. She is a gold member of the International Hyperhidrosis Society.

Dr Ean Smit`s main focus is skin rejuvenation, using non-surgical methods and laser technology. Dr Smit is a noted national authority on Cutaneous Laser Surgery and is a Fellow of the American Society for Laser Medicine and Surgery.

We pride ourselves on being the leader in our field.

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Dr Izolda Heydenrych | Dermatologist | Cosmetic ...

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THE TECHNOLOGICAL CITIZEN Immortality, Transhumanism …

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:45 pm

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About Regenerative Medicine Research at the Texas Heart …

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 1:44 pm

Dr.DorisTayloris involved in both laboratory and clinical studies using cell therapy to treat disease. Almost5 million Americans are living with heart failure and more than half a million new cases are diagnosed annually. Almost 50,000 people die each year while awaiting a heart transplant and, for a decade or more, only about 2,200 heart transplants have been performed in the entire United States. The need is dwarfed by the availability of donor organs.

This is one of the reasons there is such hope placed in the promising field of regenerative medicine. The groundbreaking work of Dr. Taylor and her team has demonstrated the ability in the lab to strip organs, including the heart, of their cellular make-up leaving a decellularized "scaffold." The heartcan then be re-seeded with cells that, when supplied with blood and oxygen, regenerate the scaffold into a functioning heart. Dr. Taylor calls this using nature's platform to create a bioartificial heart.

The hope is that this research is an early step toward being able to grow a fully functional human heart in the laboratory. Dr. Taylor has demonstrated that the process works for other organs as well, such as kidney, pancreas, lung, and liver where she has already tested the same approachopening a door in the field of organ transplantation.

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Preventive Medicine – Home

Posted: October 2, 2015 at 10:46 am

We specialize in Primary Care Medicine with a focus on natural/alternative medicine and hormone replacement. It is our desire to treat the root cause of your medical problems, and not just the symptoms, so that you can live the healthiest, longest, and most enjoyable life possible. We take a different approach to your healthcare and believe strongly in treating our patients with natural, safe, and effective treatments that help the body to heal and repair. This involves taking the time to sit and listen to our patients and gathering all the information we need to really figure out what is going on. We try and avoid a rushed office visit where there is not enough time to really discuss the full extent of the problems you may be having. This type of medicine is known as Functional Medicine and goes much deeper into the cause of your health problems than standard approaches to health care.

We know that the body is very capable of healing itself and with the right knowledge, supplements, hormones, natural treatments, and lifestyle changes, you can start to overcome chronic disease and worsening health issues. You can begin to feel healthy again with a new energy and vitality for life that you may not have thought was possible. We believe you can feel young, energetic, and joyous about life at any age, and would love to help you achieve this. Please contact our office at one of our two locations to get some more information on how you can start feeling great again.

Altanta, GA 678-705-2118 5505 Peachtree Dunwoody Rd Suite 410 Atlanta, GA 30342

Ringgold, GA 706-891-1200 148 Cobb Parkway Ringgold, GA 30736

We Accept the following insurance plans: Cigna, Medicare, United, Blue Cross Blue Shield, and Humana We also offer very reasonable cash options for those who are uninsured, please call for more information.

What To Expect: We discover the root cause of many of your health problems by various methods. First, we gather a very detailed health history and review all of your concerns so that we can treat you as a holistic being. Then we gather information through various diagnostics that are appropriate for your conditions. These may include: comprehensive blood work, in depth hormone and full thyroid testing, salivary adrenal testing, micronutrient and immune testing, comprehensive stool analysis, heavy metal testing, bacterial and yeast overgrowth urine analysis, and other various tests. After we have collected the needed information, we than meet with you and review all the findings in detail to create a comprehensive treatment plan. This plan will include therapies such as nutrition, supplements, detox, exercise programs, and medications and hormones. You will have full input as to what testing you would like to pursue and what will go into your treatment plan. We will work with you closely to achieve your health goals and keep you headed in the right direction for optimal health and well being!

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Umbilical Cord Blood Stem Cells | CancerConnect News

Posted: October 1, 2015 at 6:49 pm

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