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Insight: Stem Cells — Kerri, Kristy and Jodi – Video

Posted: July 17, 2014 at 9:47 am


Insight: Stem Cells -- Kerri, Kristy and Jodi
Kerri Pottharst, Kristy Cruise and Jodi Russell reveal why they are choosing to have stem cell treatment to help with their illnesses. Catch the full episode...

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Before the fourth course of transplantation-Wu Yanyi – Cerebral Palsy (Male, 6 years old) 2008 – Video

Posted: July 17, 2014 at 9:47 am


Before the fourth course of transplantation-Wu Yanyi - Cerebral Palsy (Male, 6 years old) 2008
Name: Wu Yanyi Gender: Male Age: 6 years old Nationality: China Diagnosis: Cerebral Palsy Wu Yanyi, Male, 6 years old, comes from Yingshan city in Hubei province. Preterm birth and was diagnosed...

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Before the first course of transplantation-Wu Yanyi – Cerebral Palsy (Male, 6 years old) 2008 – Video

Posted: July 17, 2014 at 9:47 am


Before the first course of transplantation-Wu Yanyi - Cerebral Palsy (Male, 6 years old) 2008
Name: Wu Yanyi Gender: Male Age: 6 years old Nationality: China Diagnosis: Cerebral Palsy Wu Yanyi, Male, 6 years old, comes from Yingshan city in Hubei province. Preterm birth and was diagnosed...

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Before the first course of transplantation-Wu Yanyi - Cerebral Palsy (Male, 6 years old) 2008 - Video

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Before the second course of transplantation- Xiao Zhang – Cerebral Palsy (male, 9 years old) – 2012 – Video

Posted: July 17, 2014 at 9:47 am


Before the second course of transplantation- Xiao Zhang - Cerebral Palsy (male, 9 years old) - 2012
Name: Xiao Zhang Gender: Male Age: 9 years old Nationality: China Diagnosis: Cerebral Palsy Xiao Zhang, Male, 9 years old. He was diagnosed with cerebral palsy due to pathologic jaundice when...

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Before the second course of transplantation- Xiao Zhang - Cerebral Palsy (male, 9 years old) - 2012 - Video

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The Benefits of Stem Cell Treatments for Autoimmune Disease – Video

Posted: July 17, 2014 at 9:47 am


The Benefits of Stem Cell Treatments for Autoimmune Disease
Mississippi Stem Cell Treatment Center offers the administration of a revolutionary, FDA-approved autoimmune disease treatment. Visit at 1153 Ocean Springs R...

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The Benefits of Stem Cell Treatments for Autoimmune Disease - Video

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Insight: S2014 Ep22 Stem Cells – Video

Posted: July 17, 2014 at 9:47 am


Insight: S2014 Ep22 Stem Cells
Desperate Australians are turning to controversial, unproven stem cell treatments for a whole range of illnesses. They say they #39;re tired of waiting for the long process of clinical trials to...

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2014 07 16 Embryonic Stem Cell Research – Video

Posted: July 17, 2014 at 9:47 am


2014 07 16 Embryonic Stem Cell Research
Lawrence Goldstein, University of California, San Diego.

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2014 07 16 Embryonic Stem Cell Research - Video

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President Obama on Stem Cell Research English – Video

Posted: July 16, 2014 at 4:46 pm


President Obama on Stem Cell Research English
purtieronline.com cell therapy.

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Gene Profiling Technique to Accelerate Stem Cell Therapies for Eye Diseases

Posted: July 16, 2014 at 2:50 pm

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Newswise Researchers at the National Institutes of Health have developed a technique that will speed up the production of stem-cell derived tissues. The method simultaneously measures the expression of multiple genes, allowing scientists to quickly characterize cells according to their function and stage of development. The technique will help the researchers in their efforts to use patients skin cells to regenerate retinal pigment epithelium (RPE)a tissue in the back of the eye that is affected in several blinding eye diseases. It will also help the scientists search for drugs for personalized treatments.

Progress in stem cell-based therapies has been limited by our capacity to authenticate cells and tissues, said Kapil Bharti, Ph.D., a Stadtman Investigator in the Unit on Ocular and Stem Cell Translational Research at the National Eye Institute (NEI), a part of NIH. This assay expands that capacity and streamlines the process.

The assay was described in a recent issue of Stem Cells Translational Medicine.

The RPE is a single layer of cells that lies adjacent to the retina, where the light-sensitive photoreceptors commonly called rods and cones are located. The RPE supports photoreceptor function. Several diseases cause the RPE to break down, which in turn leads to the loss of photoreceptors and vision.

The stem cells Dr. Bharti is using to make RPE are induced pluripotent (iPS) stem cells, which are produced by reverting mature cells to an immature state, akin to embryonic stem cells. iPS cells can be derived from a patients skin or blood cells, coaxed into other cell types (such as neurons or muscle), and in theory, re-implanted without causing immune rejection.

To verify the identity of RPE made from iPS cells, scientists use microscopy to ensure the tissue looks like RPE and physiological assays to ensure the tissue behaves like RPE. They also use a technique called quantitative RT-PCR to measure the expression of genes that indicate ongoing cell development and function. For example, expression of the gene SOX2 is much higher in iPS cells than mature RPE.

But quantitative RT-PCR only permits the simultaneous measurement of a few genes per sample. Dr. Bharti teamed up with Marc Ferrer, Ph.D., of NIHs National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) to develop a multiplex assaya method for simultaneously measuring multiple genes per RPE sample in a highly automated fashion. The assay is based on a commercially available platform from the biotech company Affymetrix. In the assay, tiny snippets of DNA tethered to beads are used to capture RNA moleculescreated when genes are expressed by cells in the RPE sample. Once captured, the RNA from distinct genes is labeled with a fluorescent tag.

Starting with cells from a skin biopsy, the researchers generated iPS-derived RPE and then measured the expression of eight genes that are markers of development, function, and disease. They measured RNA levels of each gene one at a time using quantitative RT-PCR and then all genes simultaneously using the multiplex assay. When compared, the results correlated.

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Gene Profiling Technique to Accelerate Stem Cell Therapies for Eye Diseases

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Trying gene therapy to create biological pacemaker – Quincy Herald-Whig | Illinois & Missouri News, Sports

Posted: July 16, 2014 at 2:48 pm

By LAURAN NEERGAARD AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - No batteries required: Scientists are creating a biological pacemaker by injecting a gene into the hearts of sick pigs that changed ordinary cardiac cells into a special kind that induces a steady heartbeat.

The study, published Wednesday, is one step toward developing an alternative to electronic pacemakers that are implanted into 300,000 Americans a year.

"There are people who desperately need a pacemaker but can't get one safely," said Dr. Eduardo Marban, director of the Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute in Los Angeles, who led the work. "This development heralds a new era of gene therapy" that one day might offer them an option.

Your heartbeat depends on a natural pacemaker, a small cluster of cells - it's about the size of a peppercorn, Marban says - that generates electrical activity. Called the sinoatrial node, it acts like a metronome to keep the heart pulsing at 60 to 100 beats a minute or so, more when you're active. If that node quits working correctly, hooking the heart to an electronic pacemaker works very well for most people.

But about 2 percent of recipients develop an infection that requires the pacemaker to be removed for weeks until antibiotics wipe out the germs, Marban said. And some fetuses are at risk of stillbirth when their heartbeat falters, a condition called congenital heart block.

For over a decade, teams of researchers have worked to create a biological alternative that might help those kinds of patients, trying such approaches as using stem cells to spur the growth of a new sinoatrial node.

Marban's newest attempt uses gene therapy to reprogram a small number of existing heart muscle cells so that they start looking and acting like natural pacemaker cells instead.

Because pigs' hearts are so similar to human hearts, Marban's team studied the approach in 12 laboratory pigs with a defective heart rhythm.

They used a gene named TBX18 that plays a role in the embryonic development of the sinoatrial node. Working through a vein, they injected the gene into some of the pigs' hearts - in a spot that doesn't normally initiate heartbeats - and tracked them for two weeks.

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