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Cartilage developed from stem cells for arthritis cure

Posted: March 6, 2015 at 12:51 pm

London, Mar 4:

Scientists have successfully developed healthy cartilage from embryonic stem cells, a breakthrough that could help treat arthritis patients.

Researchers grew and transformed embryonic stem cells into cartilage cells also known as chondrocytes.

This work represents an important step forward in treating cartilage damage by using embryonic stem cells to form new tissue, although its still in its early experimental stages, said Professor Sue Kimber and her team in the Faculty of Life Sciences at The University of Manchester.

During the study, the team analysed the ability of embryonic stems cells to become precursor cartilage cells.

They were then implanted into cartilage defects in the knee joints of rats.

After four weeks cartilage was partially repaired and following 12 weeks a smooth surface, which appeared similar to normal cartilage, was observed.

Further study of this newly regenerated cartilage showed that cartilage cells from embryonic stem cells were still present and active within the tissue.

Developing and testing this protocol in rats is the first step in generating the information needed to run a study in people with arthritis.

Before this will be possible more data will need to be collected to check that this protocol is effective and that there are no toxic side-effects, researchers said.

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Cartilage developed from stem cells for arthritis cure

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Healing Tendon Tears, Ligamentous Tears and Sprains with Stem Cell Therapy – Video

Posted: March 6, 2015 at 12:44 pm


Healing Tendon Tears, Ligamentous Tears and Sprains with Stem Cell Therapy
For more information: http://www.rmiclinic.com or 877-899-7836 (toll-free) Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon discusses treating tendon tears, ligament tears and sp...

By: Riordan-McKenna Institute

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Healing Tendon Tears, Ligamentous Tears and Sprains with Stem Cell Therapy - Video

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Shoulder Labral Tear Repair Using Stem Cell Therapy – Orthopedic Surgeon, Dr. Wade McKenna – Video

Posted: March 6, 2015 at 12:44 pm


Shoulder Labral Tear Repair Using Stem Cell Therapy - Orthopedic Surgeon, Dr. Wade McKenna
Board Certified Orthopedic Surgeon, Dr. Wade McKenna explains how Stemnexa stem cell therapy and amniotic tissue product can enhance the healing process for labral tears in the shoulder. For...

By: Riordan-McKenna Institute

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Shoulder Labral Tear Repair Using Stem Cell Therapy - Orthopedic Surgeon, Dr. Wade McKenna - Video

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BioLogic Stem Cell Therapy Cream – Video

Posted: March 6, 2015 at 12:44 pm


BioLogic Stem Cell Therapy Cream
http://trkur.com/7255/17599.

By: Travis Milton

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BioLogic Stem Cell Therapy Cream - Video

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Stem cell therapy in AKI Dr Mohamed Kamal – Video

Posted: March 6, 2015 at 12:44 pm


Stem cell therapy in AKI Dr Mohamed Kamal
Stem cell therapy in AKI Dr Mohamed Kamal.

By: HusseinSheashaa

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Stem cell therapy in AKI Dr Mohamed Kamal - Video

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Exhibit reveals power of stem cells

Posted: March 6, 2015 at 12:44 pm

A MAJOR inter-active exhibition demonstrating the power of stem cells is under way in the North-East.

Newcastles Centre for Life is hosting a unique hands-on showcase for all demonstrating the power of our bodys master cells.

The Super Cells: The Power Of Stem Cells exhibition which runs until April 19 - uses interactive displays to help explain everything from where disease comes from, to how a lizard grows a new tail.

The Cell Therapy Catapult, a national body which promotes stem cell research, commissioned the exhibit as part of a global public education programme which will have the exhibit displayed in key locations around the world to demonstrate the continuing revolution in biotechnology.

Keith Thompson, CEO of the Cell Therapy Catapult, said: Were proud not only to help fund the building of this fantastic exhibit, but also help bring it to the UK where families can learn how cells have the potential to provide new treatments to help cure diseases and conditions as diverse as blindness, diabetes and cancer.

Were delighted that the Centre for Life in Newcastle is hosting this exhibit to help people understand how this important area of science will help the health and wealth of the country for generations to come.

The exhibition was conceived and built by Canadas Stem Cell Network and the Sherbrooke Museum of Nature and Science. The planning and production spanned nearly two years, and included consideration of what children are taught in school as well as their natural curiosity.

Animations, touch-screen displays, videos and stunning images are part of the colourful exhibit. Each of the four sections has a specific area of focus, whether introducing the concept of a cell, to explaining how stem cells form the body from fertilisation to birth and beyond, to showing where stem cells live in the bodys tissues and organs

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Exhibit reveals power of stem cells

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Twin copies of gene pair up in embryonic stem cells at critical moment in differentiation

Posted: March 5, 2015 at 11:57 pm

11 hours ago We and other mammals have two copies of each gene, and each copy, or 'allele,' was thought to remain physically apart from the other in the cell nucleus. David Spector's team now finds that the alleles of a specific gene, Oct4, can and do pair up in mammalian cells. (Oct4 gene alleles are labeled in green; other DNA is stained blue; cell nuclei are outlined in red). The Oct4 alleles were observed to pair up just as embryonic stem cells differentiated into specific cell types. Credit: Spector Lab, CSHL

Imagine a pair of twins that everyone believed to be estranged, who turn out to be closer than anyone knew. A genetic version of this heartwarming tale might be taking place in our cells. We and other mammals have two copies of each gene, one from each parent. Each copy, or "allele," was thought to remain physically apart from the other in the cell nucleus, but a new study finds that alleles can and do pair up in mammalian cells.

Intriguingly, the pairing of at least one set of alleles has been observed to coincide with a critical time in the life of a stem cell: the moment when it commits to develop into a specific cell type. This process is called differentiation.

In work published today in Cell Stem Cell a team of researchers led by Professor David L. Spector at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) showed that the two alleles of Oct4, a gene important in embryonic stem cells, did not come together randomly, at any time or place, but did so at the developmental point at which stem cells begin their maturation into specific cell types.

Spector, along with Megan Hogan, Ph.D., lead author on the new paper, and colleagues, began by observing the location within the cell nucleus of various genes known to be important in stem cells. "We examined hundreds of cells, and we made the interesting and unexpected finding that the two alleles of the Oct4 gene tended to co-localize together in about 25% of the cells," Spector says. "This was really unexpected, but it's the sort of image that's worth a thousand words."

Examining enough single cells to make sure the team was observing a widespread phenomenon was no easy task. "It was a lot of work, but I think in the end the pictures that come out of it, the stories that we have gotten out if it, makes it worth it," says Hogan, a recent doctoral student in the Spector Lab and now a postdoctoral investigator at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

To figure out if what they were seeing was physiologically important, the team studied whether they could manipulate the timing of the Oct4 pairing during differentiation. They used different methods to cause the stem cells to differentiate, and found that the more rapidly the cells differentiated, the earlier Oct4 pairing occurred. "This supported the notion that this was a potentially very exciting finding," Spector says.

To confirm that the Oct4 pairing wasn't something that only occurred in tissue culture, the team then looked in mouse embryos. "The pairing was equal to or even a little bit more frequent than in culture, and that was really comforting and extremely convincing to us that there is physiological relevance to this," Spector says.

The team then wanted to figure out whether the Oct4 allelic pairing might play a role in regulating the gene's expression, a process that eventually results in the production of the OCT4 protein. As the Oct4 alleles are not expressed after stem cell differentiation is initiated, their data suggests that Oct4 pairing occurs during the gene's transition from an "on" to an "off" state.

One of the key questions to be answered in future research is why the Oct4 alleles come together. Spector hypothesizes that Oct4, being a key regulator of stem cell differentiation, may have to go through a special step while changing from the "on" to the "off" state.

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Twin copies of gene pair up in embryonic stem cells at critical moment in differentiation

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Global Pharma Rising Stars Outlook 2015

Posted: March 5, 2015 at 11:51 pm

DUBLIN, Mar. 05, 2015 /PRNewswire/ --Research and Markets

(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/5sqnn3/global_rising) has announced the addition of the "Global Rising Stars Outlook 2015" report to their offering.

Innovative Therapies for treating diseases are being sought after with fresh vigor as new targets , approaches and biology is discovered. One field which is poised to bring a paradigm change in the way diseases are treated in the next decades is the Stem cell therapy/Regenerative Medicine space.

The number of companies and products in the clinic have reached a critical mass warranting a close watch for those interested in keeping pace with the development of new medicines. The Regenerative medicine Universe is large and new companies are being added to it rapidly. As a result we have used some filters to select a few names for a detailed coverage in our Outlook this year.

Key Criteria for Our Selection are:

- Uniqueness of the Technology platform and the ability to scale up commercially in case of positive outcome of products in the pipeline - Pipeline and clinical data analysis - Marketed product and commercial tie up. Robustness of the Management, financial and business model.

Key Topics Covered:

Part 1- Rising Stars in Regenerative Medicine and Stem cell based Cell Therapies-Drugs of the Future

Part II-Indian Innovators- Rising Stars:

Companies Mentioned

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Global Pharma Rising Stars Outlook 2015

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US MILITARY INVESTMENT IN REGENERATIVE MEDICINE HD – Video

Posted: March 5, 2015 at 11:50 pm


US MILITARY INVESTMENT IN REGENERATIVE MEDICINE HD
Moderator - Michael R. Davis, MD, FACS, United States Army Institute of Surgical Research Speakers - Debra Niemeyer, PhD, 59th Medical Wing Joint Base San An...

By: worldstemcell

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US MILITARY INVESTMENT IN REGENERATIVE MEDICINE HD - Video

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Activating genes on demand: Possible?

Posted: March 5, 2015 at 11:50 pm

When it comes to gene expression -- the process by which our DNA provides the recipe used to direct the synthesis of proteins and other molecules that we need for development and survival -- scientists have so far studied one single gene at a time. A new approach developed by Harvard geneticist George Church, Ph.D., can help uncover how tandem gene circuits dictate life processes, such as the healthy development of tissue or the triggering of a particular disease, and can also be used for directing precision stem cell differentiation for regenerative medicine and growing organ transplants.

The findings, reported by Church and his team of researchers at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and Harvard Medical School in Nature Methods, show promise that precision gene therapies could be developed to prevent and treat disease on a highly customizable, personalized level, which is crucial given the fact that diseases develop among diverse pathways among genetically-varied individuals. Wyss Core Faculty member Jim Collins, Ph.D., was also a co-author on the paper. Collins is also the Henri Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering & Science and Professor in the Department of Biological Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The approach leverages the Cas9 protein, which has already been employed as a Swiss Army knife for genome engineering, in a novel way. The Cas9 protein can be programmed to bind and cleave any desired section of DNA -- but now Church's new approach activates the genes Cas9 binds to rather than cleaving them, triggering them to activate transcription to express or repress desired genetic traits. And by engineering the Cas9 to be fused to a triple-pronged transcription factor, Church and his team can robustly manipulate single or multiple genes to control gene expression.

"In terms of genetic engineering, the more knobs you can twist to exert control over the expression of genetic traits, the better," said Church, a Wyss Core Faculty member who is also Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and Professor of Health Sciences and Technology at Harvard and MIT. "This new work represents a major, entirely new class of knobs that we could use to control multiple genes and therefore influence whether or not specific genetics traits are expressed and to what extent -- we could essentially dial gene expression up or down with great precision."

Such a capability could lead to gene therapies that would mitigate age-related degeneration and the onset of disease; in the study, Church and his team demonstrated the ability to manipulate gene expression in yeast, flies, mouse and human cell cultures.

"We envision using this approach to investigate and create comprehensive libraries that document which gene circuits control a wide range of gene expression," said one of the study's lead authors Alejandro Chavez, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow at the Wyss Institute. Jonathan Schieman, Ph.D, of the Wyss Institute and Harvard Medical School, and Suhani Vora, of the Wyss Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Harvard Medical School, are also lead co-authors on the study.

The new Cas9 approach could also potentially target and activate sections of the genome made up of genes that are not directly responsible for transcription, and which previously were poorly understood. These sections, which comprise up to 90% of the genome in humans, have previously been considered to be useless DNA "dark matter" by geneticists. In contrast to translated DNA, which contains recipes of genetic information used to express traits, this DNA dark matter contains transcribed genes which act in mysterious ways, with several of these genes often having influence in tandem.

But now, that DNA dark matter could be accessed using Cas9, allowing scientists to document which non-translated genes can be activated in tandem to influence gene expression. Furthermore, these non-translated genes could also be turned into a docking station of sorts. By using Cas9 to target and bind gene circuits to these sections, scientists could introduce synthetic loops of genes to a genome, therefore triggering entirely new or altered gene expressions.

The ability to manipulate multiple genes in tandem so precisely also has big implications for advancing stem cell engineering for development of transplant organs and regenerative therapies.

"In order to grow organs from stem cells, our understanding of developmental biology needs to increase rapidly," said Church. "This multivariate approach allows us to quickly churn through and analyze large numbers of gene combinations to identify developmental pathways much faster than has been previously capable."

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Activating genes on demand: Possible?

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