bluebird bio files for IPO, advancing B-thalassemia program

Neil Littman is the Business Development Officer at CIRM where he is responsible for facilitating opportunities for outside investment in stem cell research in California for both CIRM-funded and non CIRM-funded programs by biopharma companies and venture capital investors. A CIRM-funded company, bluebird bio Inc., today filed an S-1 registration statement with the SEC for … Continue reading bluebird bio files for IPO, advancing B-thalassemia program

Galileo and reproductive cloning both fall victim to dogma

Geoff Lomax is CIRM's Senior Officer to the Standards Working Group Yesterday the news broke that scientists led by Shoukhrat Mitalipov at Oregon Health and Science University derived human embryonic stem cells through a process called nuclear transfer (more about that here). The report is an important step forward for the development of stem cell-based therapies because … Continue reading Galileo and reproductive cloning both fall victim to dogma

New technique could prevent the immune system from rejecting transplanted cells or organs

Mark Anderson, MD, PhD, left, and Matthias Hebrok, PhDIn what could be a critical step for developing cell transplantation therapies, CIRM grantees at UCSF have managed to turn embryonic stem cells into functioning tissue from what might be the smallest and most easily forgotten organ of your body -- the thymus. Although the thymus is … Continue reading New technique could prevent the immune system from rejecting transplanted cells or organs

Caffeine held the key to creating embryonic stem cells from cloned embryos

A colony of human embryonic stem cells, courtesy of Julie Baker at the Stanford University School of MedicineScientists at Oregon Health & Science University have achieved what many scientists have been working toward for decades: they’ve created embryonic stem cells from cloned human embryos.These cells, like the embryonic stem cells that come from embryos donated … Continue reading Caffeine held the key to creating embryonic stem cells from cloned embryos

Getting rid of a protein that promotes longer lifespan slows MS in mice

Neuron showing the protective sheath that is lost in people with multiple sclerosisOur grantees at Stanford University have found a protein with an intriguing role in the development of multiple sclerosis. The work is still in mice, but points to a new pathway for developing drugs for the disease.People with MS slowly lose the protective … Continue reading Getting rid of a protein that promotes longer lifespan slows MS in mice

California a veritable hotbed of iPS cell patent activity, study finds

Frozen iPS cells courtesy of William Collins in the lab of Deepak Srivastava and Christopher Schlieve at the Gladstone Institutes.It looks like California is a veritable hotbed of reprogrammed stem cell activity. (These are the iPS cells that are reprogrammed from adult tissues like skin.)The publication Genetic Engineering News looked at new patents for iPS … Continue reading California a veritable hotbed of iPS cell patent activity, study finds

Breast cancer advocate Barbara Brenner dies of ALS

Ron Leuty of the San Francisco Business Times  wrote a nice obituary for breast cancer advocate Barbara Brenner, who founded the notoriously feisty Breast Cancer Action. The San Francisco-based organization took aim at Big Pharama, Big Biotech and what she called the "pinkwashing" of breast cancer awareness.Brenner died of ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's … Continue reading Breast cancer advocate Barbara Brenner dies of ALS

Excercise induces new neurons to form in the brain via seratonin

Image by LittleDebbie11Back in the late 1990s, CIRM grantee at Salk Institute for Biological Studies Fred Gage published what might be my favorite stem cell research ever: he found mice that exercise regularly have more new neurons forming in their brains and seemed to have better memories than their couch-potato labmates.As a runner, that struck … Continue reading Excercise induces new neurons to form in the brain via seratonin

Stem cell Stories that caught our eye: getting therapies to market, creating new bone, healing skin ulcers

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. Getting a therapy to market. Fierce Biotech published an insightful interview with Henry Termeer, former CEO of Genzyme, which was the first company to market … Continue reading Stem cell Stories that caught our eye: getting therapies to market, creating new bone, healing skin ulcers

Mathematics + Biology: A Stem Cell Genetics Love Story

(photo: Wikimedia Commons)A video by Stanford University recently reminded me of my own surprise, as a biologist, of the power of math. The video and corresponding Scope blog entry describes Stanford stem cell scientists getting a shock when a mere engineer gave them a lesson in speeding up research.One nice perk to choosing a cell … Continue reading Mathematics + Biology: A Stem Cell Genetics Love Story