Page 2,304«..1020..2,3032,3042,3052,306..2,3102,320..»

Coming Up: Live Coverage of Today’s California Stem Cell Meeting

Posted: July 28, 2013 at 3:03 am

The California Stem Cell Report will
provide live, wall-to-wall coverage of today's meeting of the
governing board of the $3 billion California stem cell agency.
At the top of the agenda is a $70
million proposal aimed at creating a string of Alpha stem cell clinics in
California that would serve as a foundation for the state's stem cell
business. Also on tap are other proposed grant programs, including a
$23 million expansion of a researcher recruitment effort and a $35 million round aimed at removing roadblocks to turning research into
cures.
Stories will be filed as warranted
throughout the day based on the Internet audiocast of the proceedings. 

Interested parties can also listen in
on the meeting via the Internet. Instructions can be found on the agenda.  

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/Vi8IGlL2TzY/coming-up-live-coverage-of-todays.html

Posted in Stem Cells, Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Coming Up: Live Coverage of Today’s California Stem Cell Meeting

Stem Cell Lines and Paid-for Eggs: Stem Cell Agency Delays Action on Easing Restrictions

Posted: July 28, 2013 at 3:03 am

A key panel of the California stem cell
agency today balked at approving a plan to ease restrictions on
using stem cell lines derived from women who were paid for their
eggs.
The proposal had been scheduled to be
taken up tomorrow by the governing board of the $3 billion agency,
but the board's standards working group delayed action.
In response to a question, Kevin
McCormack
, a spokesman for the agency, said in an email,

“It was felt that more discussion
was needed before moving to a vote so another meeting is going to be
scheduled.”

In 2006, the CIRM governing board
approved regulations that banned the use of CIRM funds for stem cells
lines derived using compensation. That rule would be modified under
today's plan, which would permit the CIRM governing board to approve
the use of such lines following a staff study evaluating scientific and ethical issues.
Their use would be allowed if the lines would “advance CIRM's
mission.”

The delay came after four
organizations, including the Center for Genetics and Society in
Berkeley, argued that the plan is vague and did not adequately
address safety issues.
The four-page statement by the groups
said that the plan does not appear to have met “numerous concerns”
raised in 2009 in a document co-authored by the CIRM staff. Those
concerns include long-term risk and ethical issues.
Under the proposal, the groups said
that the agency governing board

“...will decide whether to approve a
grantee’s request to use a stem cell line created with paid-for
eggs on the basis of whether doing so 'will advance CIRM’s
mission.' This criterion is much too vague, and doesn’t include
consideration of the health or welfare of the women who undergo egg
retrieval. Protecting the well-being of women providing eggs is not
even mentioned (though perhaps it could be considered as an element
of the fifth of five 'factors to be considered by the ICOC(the agency
board),' 'whether the donation…was consistent with `best practices’
at the time of donation').”

The standards group also heard from a
UCLA researcher who argued on behalf of the change. Kathrin Plath
said she and her colleagues wanted to use a paid-for stem cell line
from the Oregon experiment that cloned human stem cells.

(An earlier version of this item said the change under consideration would ease restrictions on "purchasing" stem cell lines. The word "purchasing" was changed to "using.")
Here is the text of the statement by
the four organizations.

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/QECOGHuAvIc/stem-cell-lines-and-paid-for-eggs-stem.html

Posted in Stem Cells, Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Stem Cell Lines and Paid-for Eggs: Stem Cell Agency Delays Action on Easing Restrictions

$70 Million Alpha Stem Cell Clinic Project Garners Mainstream Media Attention

Posted: July 28, 2013 at 3:03 am

California's $70 million plan for a
chain of “Alpha” stem cell clinics today received its first major
attention from the mainstream media.
The story came in the state's largest
circulation newspaper, appearing this morning on the home page of the
website of Los Angeles Times.
The Alpha project would create five clinics
around the state and a coordination/information center under a
concept that comes before the governing board of the state's $3
billion stem cell agency at its meeting tomorrow in Burlingame, Ca. Funds could be
awarded as early as a year from now. (For more information, see here
and here.)
Reporter Eryn Brown quoted Natalie
DeWitt
, special projects officer for CIRM, as the stem cell agency is known, and Maria Millan, a CIRM
medical officer. Brown wrote,

“Clinics to conduct trials of stem
cell therapies have different needs than clinics designed to deliver
conventional therapies, DeWitt and Millan said. They need special
facilities for handling the cells safely, as well as imaging
equipment to track the cells once they're delivered into a patient’s
body.  Some of this infrastructure already exists, but other
parts of it still need to be perfected.  Establishing clinics to
house multiple trials might create the critical mass needed to get
the infrastructure in place, they said....

"Additionally, they said, CIRM
hopes that such collaboration would encourage stem cell companies to
share information -- speeding their own work and also helping out
policymakers and insurers who are trying to figure out how they'll
pay for stem cell therapies in the future.”

The Times quoted the
California Stem Cell Report as saying last week,

 “The Alpha clinics
are aimed at creation of a sturdy foundation for the stem cell
industry in California, capitalizing on the burgeoning, international
lure of stem cell treatments.”

The proposal envisions Alpha stem cell
clinics at major, established institutions around the state. It is
possible that two could be located in the Los Angeles area at
institutions such as UCLA, USC, Cedars-Sinai or the City of Hope, all
of which have representatives on the stem cell agency's governing
board. Other likely locations are in the San Francisco Bay area and
San Diego, again at facilities such as Stanford, UC San Francisco and
UC San Diego that have representation on the agency board.

Institutions competing for the grants,
including businesses, will be subject to closed-door. peer review
prior to final action by the full governing board.  

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/s_-mm4nTU_0/70-million-alpha-stem-cell-clinic.html

Posted in Stem Cells, Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on $70 Million Alpha Stem Cell Clinic Project Garners Mainstream Media Attention

UCLA Researcher Calls for Easing of Restrictions on Stem Cell Lines Derived from Eggs From Paid Providers

Posted: July 28, 2013 at 3:03 am

A UCLA researcher has spoken out in
support of a proposal to allow use of California stem cell agency
funds to purchase stem cell lines derived from eggs provided by women
who have been paid for the service.
Kathrin Plath, an associate professor, said in a letter to the agency that she and her colleagues would like to use a line from the Oregon SCNT
experiment by Shoukhrat Mitalipov in which human stem cells were cloned. Currently agency funds cannot be used for that purpose as
a result of regulations that are the extension of a state law that
bars use of agency funds for payment for eggs.
The agency's standards group meets later today to consider changing those regulations. The proposal will
then go before the full board tomorrow.
Plath, who has received $5 million from CIRM, said,

“In my lab, we are ... interested in
understanding what happens to the somatically silenced X chromosome
when differentiated cells are reprogrammed by SCNT. The key question
is: are these SCNT-ESCs more similar to iPSCs or
fertilization-derived ESCs with respect to the epigenetic state of
the X chromosome. Furthermore, it has been shown in mouse
reprogramming that the active X chromosome becomes deregulated during
SCNT-based reprogramming, and we would like to address this problem
in the human system as well.

“We believe that the comparison of
the epigenetic states between fertilization-derived ESCs, SCNT-ESCs
and human iPSCs is important for a better characterization of these
cells and understanding of their epigenetic nature.”

Source:
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/uqpFc/~3/2YTtgbJCtRw/ucla-researcher-calls-for-easing-of.html

Posted in Stem Cells, Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on UCLA Researcher Calls for Easing of Restrictions on Stem Cell Lines Derived from Eggs From Paid Providers

Blue Hills Veterinary Hospital – Stem Cell Therapy Success – Video

Posted: July 27, 2013 at 2:41 pm


Blue Hills Veterinary Hospital - Stem Cell Therapy Success
Visit http://www.bluehillsvet.co.za for more information.

By: Blue Hills Veterinary Hospital

View original post here:
Blue Hills Veterinary Hospital - Stem Cell Therapy Success - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Blue Hills Veterinary Hospital – Stem Cell Therapy Success – Video

Stem Cells Heal Heart – Video

Posted: July 26, 2013 at 10:43 pm


Stem Cells Heal Heart

By: ivanhoebroadcast

See the original post:
Stem Cells Heal Heart - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Videos | Comments Off on Stem Cells Heal Heart – Video

Charlotte Hayward – High School Stem Cell Research Intern Summer 2013, Video Project 2 – Video

Posted: July 26, 2013 at 10:43 pm


Charlotte Hayward - High School Stem Cell Research Intern Summer 2013, Video Project 2
Charlotte Hayward is a Santa Barbara High School student who is doing a stem cell research internship this summer in the laboratory of Tod Kippin at the Univ...

By: California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

Read the original post:
Charlotte Hayward - High School Stem Cell Research Intern Summer 2013, Video Project 2 - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Research | Comments Off on Charlotte Hayward – High School Stem Cell Research Intern Summer 2013, Video Project 2 – Video

Christina Tebbe – High School Stem Cell Research Intern – Summer 2013, Video Project 2 – Video

Posted: July 26, 2013 at 10:42 pm


Christina Tebbe - High School Stem Cell Research Intern - Summer 2013, Video Project 2
Christina Tebbe is a Santa Barbara Senior High School student who is doing a stem cell research internship this summer in the laboratory of Tod Kippin at the...

By: California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

See the original post here:
Christina Tebbe - High School Stem Cell Research Intern - Summer 2013, Video Project 2 - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Research | Comments Off on Christina Tebbe – High School Stem Cell Research Intern – Summer 2013, Video Project 2 – Video

European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute – Video

Posted: July 26, 2013 at 10:42 pm


European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute
Sharing the institute #39;s latest findings, Professor Clarke addresses how the University #39;s cancer stem cell concept might be used to target cancer, and in the ...

By: cardiffuni

Excerpt from:
European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute - Video

Posted in Stem Cell Research | Comments Off on European Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute – Video

Hera Nalbandian

Posted: July 26, 2013 at 10:42 pm


Hera Nalbandian Brian Woo - High School Stem Cell Research Interns Summer 2013
Hera Nalbandian is a Reseda High School student and Brian Woo is James Logan High School student. Both are doing a stem cell research internship this summer ...

By: California Institute for Regenerative Medicine

Read more:
Hera Nalbandian

Posted in Stem Cell Research | Comments Off on Hera Nalbandian

Page 2,304«..1020..2,3032,3042,3052,306..2,3102,320..»