In the past few days we’ve had several pieces of good news for businesses developing stem cell-based products.The Washington Post today reported that the House Financial Services' Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government Sponsored Enterprises held a hearing on “Reducing Barriers to Capital Formation, Part II” today to discuss reducing regulatory burdens and other capital … Continue reading Reducing barriers to capital formation for stem cell companies
Month: July 2013
Alpha clinics supporting stem cell clinical trials to be discussed July 25
Nature Medicine has a good story about our proposed Alpha Clinics. These are the clinics we've proposed funding throughout the state to support stem cell clinical trials. (We've written about them here.)The story quotes CIRM's Natalie DeWitt:Few stem cell therapies, with the exception of hematopoietic stem cells derived from bone marrow or cord blood, are … Continue reading Alpha clinics supporting stem cell clinical trials to be discussed July 25
Clinical trial testing innovative HIV/AIDS stem cell therapy gets under way
Loring Leeds told his story of living with HIV/AIDS in our Stories of HopeThe first time you try something new, particularly in the world of science, it is often a time of both optimism and caution. That’s particularly true when it’s the first time a project you have funded is starting a clinical trial, moving … Continue reading Clinical trial testing innovative HIV/AIDS stem cell therapy gets under way
This bud’s for you – scientists grow human livers in mice
Courtesy of Takanori Takebe/Yokohama City University Graduate School of Medicine One of the more intriguing promises of regenerative medicine is the thought that one day stem cells could be used to grow replacement organs. That day is still a way off but may be just a little bit closer after researchers in Japan showed that they … Continue reading This bud’s for you – scientists grow human livers in mice
Webcast of CIRM’s #ALS Google hangout now available
We just concluded our Google Hangout focused on ALS. It was our first Google Hangout and I think everyone here at CIRM is breathing a sigh of relief that all technology glitches took place before the event went live. If people missed watching the event live you can see it in the video below.It was … Continue reading Webcast of CIRM’s #ALS Google hangout now available
Vitamin C affects how genes are expressed in stem cells
Methyl groups added to DNA. Image by Christoph Bock (Max Planck Institute for Informatics) on Wikimedia commonsCIRM-funded researchers at UC San Francisco have discovered a surprising role for vitamin C in how stem cells turn genes on and off. The finding hints at a new role for the vital nutrient in normal embryonic development. Not … Continue reading Vitamin C affects how genes are expressed in stem cells
Stem cell Stories that caught our eye: improving skin repair and heart repair, but avoiding the charlatans
Here are some stem cell stories that caught our eye this past week. Some are groundbreaking science, others are of personal interest to us, and still others are just fun. Modeling our largest organ—our skin. Before we can make major strides in improving wound healing we need to understand how our skin repairs cuts and … Continue reading Stem cell Stories that caught our eye: improving skin repair and heart repair, but avoiding the charlatans
Sickle cell disease therapy hits major milestone on path to clinical trial
Nancy Rene's grandson has sickle cell disease. Read her Story of Hope on our website.Combining stem cell therapy with gene therapy looks like it can dramatically improve the safety of a therapy that has cured sickle cell disease in a few patients. Currently physicians reserve that therapy for those children with the most severe symptoms … Continue reading Sickle cell disease therapy hits major milestone on path to clinical trial
Japan to begin first human tests with induced pluripotent stem cells
Blurring at the center of vision in macular degenerationA preliminary panel of the Japanese Ministry of Health has given the green light for the first clinical tests in humans of a therapy derived from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells to treat macular degeneration, the most common cause of blindness. Induced pluripotent stem cells are mature … Continue reading Japan to begin first human tests with induced pluripotent stem cells
25 year anniversary of the blood-forming stem cell discovery
Twenty five years ago today, Irv Weissman of Stanford University published a paper in Science describing the first ever stem cell isolated from an animal’s tissues. In this case it came from the bone marrow of a mouse.Ten years later he isolated the same cell from the bone marrow of people.Twenty five years later, that … Continue reading 25 year anniversary of the blood-forming stem cell discovery