This post was originally published by the Canadian Stem Cell Network's Signals blog. Canada is home to numerous stem cell discoveries and StemCellShorts is an excellent medium through which we can convey these accomplishments to Canadians and others worldwide. The ‘shorts’ are innovative, educational and entertaining”. – Dr. Mick Bhatia, Director and Senior Scientist at the McMaster … Continue reading Great new stem cell video from Ben Paylor: What are iPS cells?
Month: October 2013
Parkinson’s disease workshop gives guidance to those developing therapies
Bruce Wisnicki spoke to our governing board about living with Parkinson's disease and his hope for a cure. You’d think Parkinson’s disease would be a slam-dunk for a stem cell-based therapy. The disease occurs when a particular group of cells in the brain die off. The idea would be to mature stem cells into that … Continue reading Parkinson’s disease workshop gives guidance to those developing therapies
CIRM’s high school stem cell curriculum now reflects the new Next Generation Science Standards that ask students to ask questions
screenshot from CIRM's education web portal with the new NGSS stem cell curriculumAround 4:00 on September 4 the California Board of Education voted unanimously to accept the Next Generation Science Standards set by a national coalition. Five weeks later, around noon on October 10 we posted two new units to our stem cell high school … Continue reading CIRM’s high school stem cell curriculum now reflects the new Next Generation Science Standards that ask students to ask questions
The stem cell future’s so bright, I have to wear shades
I’m going to date myself here but it’s been nearly 30 years since I first heard that 80’s tune, “The future’s so bright I have to wear shades”. Those catchy lyrics still ring true today, maybe not for bipartisan politics, but at least for the future of stem cell research.My rosy outlook is based not … Continue reading The stem cell future’s so bright, I have to wear shades
The Coolest Stem Cell Poster
Geoff Lomax, CIRM's Senior Officer for Medical & Ethical Standards, is blogging from this week's 2013 Till & McCulloch Meeting in Alberta. The meetings are Canada’s premier stem cell research event and provide networking with leading stem cell scientists, clinicians, bioengineers and ethicists from Canada and around the world. Ubaka Ogboug is a policy researcher … Continue reading The Coolest Stem Cell Poster
Best of the blog: Progress in cancer research
Despite decades of scientific progress, cancer remains the second most common cause of death in the United States, accounting for a quarter of all deaths. On this blog, we’ve written many times about how our grantees are progressing toward cancer treatment, but we wanted to pull the best of those posts into one place. Here … Continue reading Best of the blog: Progress in cancer research
Autism syndrome modeled in lab dish points to future therapy
Here's a major stumbling block in developing therapies for human diseases -- it's hard to find a fix if you don't really know what's wrong. Take autism spectrum disorders. By now doctors are pretty good at identifying signs of the disease, but without access to brain cells researchers don't really know what's going wrong.That's the … Continue reading Autism syndrome modeled in lab dish points to future therapy
How best to deliver stem cells to the heart?
Our grantee Joe Wu of Stanford University just published a paper that goes a long way toward explaining just how laborious it is to develop therapies based on stem cells.It all sounds so easy. Find a stem cell in the body (or mature certain kind of cell from embryonic or iPS cells), then put that … Continue reading How best to deliver stem cells to the heart?
New cellular clock reads iPS cells’ age as newborns
When you look at a person you can usually estimate an approximate age (excluding the pages of some celebrity magazines). But presented with just a cell, there are few visible indicators of age like grey hair or a sagging chin.Until yesterday. That's when a group of scientists from the University of California, Los Angeles announced … Continue reading New cellular clock reads iPS cells’ age as newborns
No sweat? Blame the sweat gland stem cells
Staining of slow-cycling sweat gland cells (green) with the protein laminin (red) and the fluorescent stain DAPI (blue)Image by Yvonne LeungMaybe it's all the running I've been doing, but the word "sweat" caught my eye in this story. Sweat, like everything else it seems, needs it's stem cells.A group at the University of Southern California … Continue reading No sweat? Blame the sweat gland stem cells