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Quickie stem cells? Not so fast

Posted: March 13, 2014 at 12:46 pm

A quick method to generate stem cells in the lab that caused a big splash earlier this year is not looking so hot after all. In January, researchers from Japan published details in the journa l Nature abo ut how stressing mouse cells by exposing them to acid could reprogram them to act like stem cells.

The announcement of this stimulus-triggered acquisition of pluripotency (STAP) method generated much excitement: if it worked it could provide another and relatively easy route to generate stem cells in the lab without needing to source them from embryonic tissues.

It was one of those discoveries that looked a bit too good to be true, and now the dust has settled, it seems that it is.

Scientists have reported having difficulty in generating stem cells using the procedure, there were apparent irregularities in the published work and it is now reported that an author on one of the January papers is calling for it to be pulled from the scientific record.

Prof Frank Barry, who directs the Regenerative Medicine Institute (Remedi) at NUI Galway, has serious reservations about the work.

When it was first published in January I was a bit sceptical that it could apparently be done do easily, he says.

I wondered why cells in the stomach, for instance, didnt become reprogrammed because they are exposed to acid conditions. And it seems that the methods cannot be reproduced, despite many efforts in other labs around the world one of our colleagues at Remedi tried to make STAP cells and also failed.

If the method works, then it will be a benefit to those of us interested in stem cells. If it doesnt work, it will be remembered only as a frustrating and wasteful distraction at at time when we really need to get on with developing stem cell therapies.

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Quickie stem cells? Not so fast

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Stem cells inside sutures could improve healing in Achilles tendon injuries

Posted: March 13, 2014 at 12:46 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

12-Mar-2014

Contact: Camille Gamboa camille.gamboa@sagepub.com 805-410-7441 SAGE Publications

Los Angeles, CA (March 12, 2014) Researchers have found that sutures embedded with stem cells led to quicker and stronger healing of Achilles tendon tears than traditional sutures, according to a new study published in the March 2014 issue of Foot & Ankle International (published by SAGE).

Achilles tendon injuries are common for professional, collegiate and recreational athletes. These injuries are often treated surgically to reattach or repair the tendon if it has been torn. Patients have to keep their legs immobilized for a while after surgery before beginning their rehabilitation. Athletes may return to their activities sooner, but risk rerupturing the tendon if it has not healed completely.

Drs. Lew Schon, Samuel Adams, and Elizabeth Allen and Researchers Margaret Thorpe, Brent Parks, and Gary Aghazarian from MedStar Union Memorial Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, conducted the study. They compared traditional surgery, surgery with stem cells injected in the injury area, and surgery with special sutures embedded with stem cells in rats. The results showed that the group receiving the stem cell sutures healed better.

"The exciting news from this early work is that the stem cells stayed in the tendon, promoting healing right away, during a time when patients are not able to begin aggressive rehabilitation. When people can't fully use their leg, the risk is that atrophy sets in and adhesions can develop which can impact how strong and functional the muscle and tendon are after it is reattached," said Dr. Schon. "Not only did the stem cells encourage better healing at the cellular level, the tendon strength itself was also stronger four weeks following surgery than in the other groups in our study," he added.

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For further information on how to take care of your feet and ankles, or to find a local orthopaedic foot and ankle surgeon, visit the American Orthopaedic Foot & Ankle Society patient website at http://www.footcaremd.org.

"Stem Cell-Bearing Suture Improves Achilles Tendon Healing in a Rat Model" by Samuel B. Adams, Jr, MD; Margaret A. Thorpe, BS; Brent G. Parks, MSc; Gary Aghazarian, BS; Elizabeth Allen, MD; and Lew C. Schon, MD in the March 2014 Foot & Ankle International.

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Stem cell therapy may help severe congestive heart failure

Posted: March 13, 2014 at 12:40 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

13-Mar-2014

Contact: Toni Baker tbaker@gru.edu 706-721-4421 Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University

Augusta, Ga. Researchers want to know whether patients with debilitating heart failure can benefit by having their own stem cells injected into their ailing heart muscle.

The severe condition is ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy, a currently incurable condition resulting from significantly compromised blood flow to the heart muscle as well as heart attacks, which leave the muscle bulky and inefficient and patients unable to carry out routine activities.

"We want to know if stem cell therapy is an option for patients who have essentially run out of options," said Dr. Adam Berman, electrophysiologist at the Medical College of Georgia at Georgia Regents University and Director of Cardiac Arrhythmia Ablation Services at Georgia Regents Health System. "It's a very exciting potential therapy, and these studies are designed to see if it works to help these patients."

Berman is a Principal Investigator on the multi-site study in which stem cells are removed from the bone marrow, their numbers significantly increased by technology developed by Aastrom Biosciences, then injected into multiple weak points in the heart. At GR Health System, the procedure is performed in the Electrophysiology Lab where Berman threads a catheter into an artery from the groin into the heart. Three-dimensional maps of the heart are created to provide a clear picture of its natural geography as well as major sites of damage.

"Everyone's heart is different, their scar burden is different, everything is different," Berman said. From that vantage point, small needles - similar in size to those used for skin testing - are used to make about 12 to 20 strategic injections of mesenchymal stem cells, which can differentiate into a variety of cell types. In this case, researchers hope the cells will improve blood flow and function of the heart.

Half of the study participants receive the stem cell treatment called ixmyelocel-T and the remainder a saline placebo. Patients go home the next day but researchers follow all participants for 12 months to assess heart function and quality of life. GR Health System plans to enroll a handful of patients in the clinical trial.

Treatment options for heart failure include frontline therapies such as diuretics to more extreme measures such as implantable ventricular assist devices and heart transplants.

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Stem cell therapy may help severe congestive heart failure

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Top Las Vegas Pain Management Clinic, Nevada Pain, Now Offering Stem Cell Therapy to Help Avoid Joint Replacement

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 7:46 pm

Las Vegas, Nevada (PRWEB) March 12, 2014

The top Las Vegas pain management centers, Nevada Pain, are now offering regenerative medicine treatments including stem cell therapy and platelet rich plasma therapy. These treatments offer significant potential for repairing injured soft tissues and arthritis. Call (702) 323-0553 for more information and scheduling.

Traditional pain management treatments typically work exceptionally well, however, they act as a proverbial "band aid" to mask pain. Regenerative medicine, on the other hand, may regenerate damaged tissue while providing exceptional pain relief.

Treatments are offered by the Board Certified, Award Winning Las Vegas pain management doctors at Nevada Pain. Platelet rich plasma therapy is one of the treatments offered, which involves a simple blood draw from the patient. The blood is spun rapidly to create a mixture of concentrated platelets and growth factors, which is then injected into the problem area.

Stem cell injections involve treatments with either bone marrow, fat derived or amniotic derived material. The injections are offered as an outpatient and involve very little risk. Each treatment provides a significant concentration of growth factors and stem cells to help with repair.

In addition to regenerative medicine options, Nevada Pain offers over 50 pain management treatments including radiofrequency ablation, spinal cord stimulator implants, several types of epidural injections, and all kinds of nerve blocks. Success rates at the clinic typically exceed 90%.

For more information and scheduling, call (702) 323-0553.

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Top Las Vegas Pain Management Clinic, Nevada Pain, Now Offering Stem Cell Therapy to Help Avoid Joint Replacement

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Hutchins Society: 'Renal Failure & Stem Cells' – Video

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 12:54 pm


Hutchins Society: #39;Renal Failure Stem Cells #39;
Courtesy of WCGS Photographers #39; Society *******************************************************

By: WCGS Photographers #39; Society

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Hutchins Society: 'Renal Failure & Stem Cells' - Video

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Stem Cell | Skeletal muscle source of stem cells – Video

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 12:54 pm


Stem Cell | Skeletal muscle source of stem cells
Skeletal muscle stem cells... another alternative? Matsumoto and colleagues, in an article published in Arthritis and Rheumatism, looked at a rat model of os...

By: Nathan Wei

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Scientist who created STAP stem cells says studies should be withdrawn

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 12:54 pm

A number of scientists have been grumbling for weeks about a pair of breakthrough stem cell studies that seemed too good to be true. Now one of the senior researchers who worked on the papers agrees that they may be right.

The studies, which were published in January by the journal Nature, described a surprisingly simple method of transforming mature cells into pluripotent stem cells capable of regenerating any type of tissue in the body. The key was to stress them out by soaking them in an acid bath for 30 minutes, prompting genetic changes that made the cells more flexible. The researchers dubbed their technique stimulus triggered acquisition of pluripotency, or STAP.

But Teruhiko Wakayama, a senior author of one of the papers and coauthor on the other, said he had lost confidence in the studies and was "no longer sure the STAP cells were actually created, according to NHK.

Wakayama, a professor at the University of Yamanashi in Kofu, Japan, told Japanese media Monday that he had asked his collaborators to withdraw the studies until the results could be verified by independent scientists. He added that he is ready to provide cell samples and detailed data to anyone who is willing to try, NHK reported.

RELATED: New method makes stem cells in about 30 minutes, scientists report

Wakayama also echoed concerns raised by others that some of the images used in the Nature papers may have been published previously. According to Japan News, an English-language website from Yomiuri Shimbun, Wakayama said the images look almost identical to images that appear in the PhD thesis of Haruko Obokata, the lead author of both Nature studies. Her thesis was about pluripotent stem cells in humans, but the cells in the Nature STAP paper were supposedly from mice.

Anonymous posters to a website called PubPeer have flagged several images in the Nature papers that they say look suspiciously like pictures in a 2011 study led by Obokata. That study, published in the journal Tissue Engineering, purports to show that cells removed from various tissues of adult mice could be coaxed to grow into other kinds of cells.

Duplicated images arent the only problem skeptics have flagged. A Japanese blog post has noted striking similarities in the words used to describe some of the methods used in one of the Nature papers and the words in a 2005 paper published in a journal called In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology Animal. In the blog post, the overlapping language is highlighted in red.

There sure seems to be a lot of overlap in text in the two papers, Paul Knoepfler, a stem cell researcher at UC Davis, wrote on his blog.

Ive heard people react to this by saying 'no big deal, its just a methods section,' while Ive heard others say 'this is misconduct,' Knoepfler added. Im sure many people fall somewhere in the middle.

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Japanese stem cell scientist calls for retraction of study

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 12:54 pm

TOKYO: A co-author of a Japanese study that promised a revolutionary way to create stem cells has called for the headline-grabbing research to be retracted over claims its data was faulty.

The findings, published by Japanese researcher Haruko Obokata and US-based scientists, outlined a simple and low-tech approach in the quest to grow transplant tissue in the lab.

The study was touted as the third great advance in stem cells -- a futuristic field that aims to reverse Alzheimer's, cancer and other crippling or lethal diseases.

But it faced hard questions as the Japan-based Riken institute, which sponsored the study, launched a probe last month over the credibility of data used in the explosive findings.

At issue are allegations that researchers used erroneous image data for an article published in the January edition of British journal Nature.

Teruhiko Wakayama, a Yamanashi University professor who co-authored the article, called for a retraction.

"It's hard to believe the findings anymore after so many mistakes in the data," he told broadcaster Nippon Television late Monday.

On Tuesday, the institute said it was mulling whether to pull back the study.

"We are considering whether to retract the report based on its credibility and research ethics, even though our investigation is still underway," it said.

In an e-mailed statement, the journal said: "Issues relating to this paper have been brought to Nature's attention and we are conducting an ongoing investigation. We have no further comment at this stage."

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Japanese stem cell scientist calls for retraction of study

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Japan stem cell scientist calls for retraction of study

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 12:54 pm

TOKYO: A co-author of a Japanese study that promised a revolutionary way to create stem cells has called for the headline-grabbing research to be retracted over claims its data was faulty.

The findings, published by Japanese researcher Haruko Obokata and US-based scientists, outlined a simple and low-tech approach in the quest to grow transplant tissue in the lab.

The study was touted as the third great advance in stem cells a futuristic field that aims to reverse Alzheimers, cancer and other crippling or lethal diseases.

But it faced hard questions as the Japan-based Riken institute, which sponsored the study, launched a probe last month over the credibility of data used in the explosive findings.

At issue are allegations that researchers used erroneous image data for an article published in the January edition of British journal Nature.

Teruhiko Wakayama, a Yamanashi University professor who co-authored the article, called for a retraction.

Its hard to believe the findings anymore after so many mistakes in the data, he told broadcaster Nippon Television late Monday.

On Tuesday, the institute said it was mulling whether to pull back the study.

We are considering whether to retract the report based on its credibility and research ethics, even though our investigation is still underway, it said.

In an e-mailed statement, the journal said: Issues relating to this paper have been brought to Natures attention and we are conducting an ongoing investigation. We have no further comment at this stage.

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Free online software helps speed up genetic discoveries

Posted: March 12, 2014 at 12:50 pm

Microarray analysis -- a complex technology commonly used in many applications such as discovering genes, disease diagnosis, drug development and toxicological research -- has just become easier and more user-friendly. A new advanced software program called Eureka-DMA provides a cost-free, graphical interface that allows bioinformaticians and bench-biologists alike to initiate analyses, and to investigate the data produced by microarrays. The program was developed by Ph.D. student Sagi Abelson of the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa, Israel.

DNA microarray analysis, a high-speed method by which the expression of thousands of genes can be analyzed simultaneously, was invented in the late 1980s and developed in the 1990s. Genetic researchers used a glass slide with tiny dots of copies of DNA to test match genes they were trying to identify. Because the array of dots was so small, it was called a "microarray." There is a strong correlation between the field of molecular biology and medical research, and microarray technology is used routinely in the area of cancer research and other epidemiology studies. Many research groups apply it to detect genetic variations between biological samples and information about aberrant gene expression levels can be used in what is called "personalized medicine." This includes customized approaches to medical care, including finding new drugs for gene targets where diseases have genetic causes and potential cures are based on an individual's aberrant gene's signal.

An article written by Abelson published in the current issue of BMC Bioinformatics (2014,15:53) describes the new software tool and provides examples of its uses.

"Eureka-DMA combines simplicity of operation and ease of data management with the rapid execution of multiple task analyses," says Abelson. "This ability can help researchers who have less experience in bioinformatics to transform the high throughput data they generate into meaningful and understandable information."

Eureka-DMA has a distinct advantage over other software programs that only work "behind the scenes" and provide only a final output. It provides users with an understanding of how their actions influence the outcome throughout all the data elucidation steps, keeping them connected to the data, and enabling them to reach optimal conclusions.

"It is very gratifying to see the insightful initiative of Sagi Abelson, a leading 'out-of-the-box' thoughtful Technion doctorate student whom I have had the privilege of supervising," said Prof. Karl Skorecki, the Director of the Rappaport Family Institute for Research in the Medical Sciences at the Technion Faculty of Medicine and Director of Medical and Research Development at the Rambam Health Care Campus. "Over and above his outstanding PhD thesis research project on cancer stem cells, Sagi has developed -- on his own -- a user-friendly computer-based graphical interface for health and biological research studies. Eureka-DMA enables users to easily interpret massive DNA expression data outputs, empowering researchers (and in the future, clinicians) to generate new testable hypotheses with great intuitive ease, and to examine complex genetic expression signatures of genes that provide information relevant to health and disease conditions. This was enabled by combining outstanding insight and expertise in biological and computer sciences, demonstrating the unique multidisciplinary strengths and intellectual freedom that fosters creative innovation at the Technion."

According to Abelson, Eureka-DMA was programmed in MATLAB, a high-level language and interactive environment for numerical computation, visualization, and programming. Advanced users of MATLAB can analyze data, develop algorithms, and create models and applications to explore multiple hypotheses and reach solutions faster than with spreadsheets or traditional software. Eureka-DMA uses many of MATLAB's toolbox features to provide ways to search for enriched pathways and genetic terms and then combines them with other relevant features.

Raw data input is through Windows Excel or text files. This, says Abelson, spares the user from dealing with multiple and less common microarray files received by different manufacturers. Results can then be exported into a 'txt' file format,' or Windows Excel, making Eureka-DMA a unified and flexible platform for microarray data analysis, interpretation and visualization. It can also be used as a fast validation tool for results obtained by different methods.

Eureka-DMA loads and exports genetic data, "normalizes" raw data, filters non-relevant data, and enables pathway enrichment analysis for mapping genes on cellular pathways. The user can browse through the enriched pathways and create an illustration of the pathway with the differentially expressed genes highlighted.

After identifying the differentially expressed genes, biological meaning is ascribed via the software so that the identification of significant co-clustered genes with similar properties -- cellular components, a biological process, or a molecular function -- can be achieved.

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