Here's a happy stem cell story for the dog days of summer: A veterinarian in Pennsylvania used an experimental stem cell therapy to help a dog regrow severely burned foot pats. The dog, named Bernie, had been left on a scorching rooftop for 10 hours.According to the Reading Eagle:When the dog was brought to the … Continue reading Stem cell therapy gives dog a new leash on life
Uncategorized
Cells derived from embryonic stem cells, iPS cells appear immature
A trend over the past few years has been comparing embryonic stem cells, adult stem cells and reprogrammed adult cells (also known as iPS cells) to each other and to other cell types. The goal is to understand what the cells are, exactly, and and how they differ from each other. Eventually this information could … Continue reading Cells derived from embryonic stem cells, iPS cells appear immature
Weeding out the tumor-forming cells from potential stem cell therapies
CIRM grantees at Stanford University have removed some of the risk of therapies based on human embryonic stem cells or reprogrammed adult cells, known as iPS cells. Both of these cells types are known as pluripotent, which means that the cells can go on to form all the mature cells of the human body. The … Continue reading Weeding out the tumor-forming cells from potential stem cell therapies
High school students get stem cell experience in California labs
UC Davis interns Rex Reyes, Jaskaran Dhillon, Thomas Gepts and Kalani Ratnasiri Last week CIRM gathered together the Creativity Award interns to learn about their summer projects. These high school students came from UC Davis, UC San Francisco, UC Santa Barbara and Stanford to congregate at the Children's Hospital Oakland, home of CIRM board member … Continue reading High school students get stem cell experience in California labs
Top questions in iPS cell research
Every once in a while CIRM grantee Paul Knoepfler at UC Davis posts an update on his blog about what he considers to be the big ticket question in research using reprogrammed adult cells, known as iPS cells. This time, he's posted five questions for the upcoming year.Will any new methods for creating iPS cells … Continue reading Top questions in iPS cell research
Heart cells divide again?
One perplexing question in regenerative medicine is why the human heart muscle cells are unable to divide and multiply their numbers. If they could, maybe they'd be able to produce new heart cells to replace those lost after a heart attack. Newts and salamanders can do it, why can't we? CIRM grantees at the University … Continue reading Heart cells divide again?
Mountain climbing raises money for stem cell research, Parkinson’s disease
A group of Parkinson's disease patients and family members have hit on a new twist to athletic fundraisers. Forget the local charity 10K race — they are hiking 19,000 foot Mt. Kilamanjaro in Tanzania to raise money for The Scripps Research Institute's Center for Regenerative Medicine, headed by CIRM grantee Jeanne Loring. Loring has CIRM … Continue reading Mountain climbing raises money for stem cell research, Parkinson’s disease
A fifth group turns skin to neurons, creating a model for Alzheimer’s disease
A few weeks ago, my colleague used this space to discuss the second and third papers showing teams had turned skin cells directly into neurons, noting that this replication of research results is essential to verifying the initial breakthrough while refining and improving it. She noted that only after much replication and refinement would she … Continue reading A fifth group turns skin to neurons, creating a model for Alzheimer’s disease
NIH names friend of CIRM as head of its new stem cell center
Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health announced this morning that Mahendra Rao will become the first director of the new NIH Intramural Center for Regenerative Medicine (NIH-CRM). It will be good for CIRM to have someone in this new role who is very knowledgable about us and has been an active supporter … Continue reading NIH names friend of CIRM as head of its new stem cell center
High school students get creative in California stem cell labs
Smarts, education and hard work will get you far, but the big leaps in science take something more -- creativity. That's the thinking behind an innovative CIRM-funded summer program that encourages the most creative high school students to spend time working in a stem cell lab. The CIRM Creativity Awards recipients are meeting in Oakland … Continue reading High school students get creative in California stem cell labs