Medistem and Licensee ERCell Receive Russian Regulatory Approval for the RECOVER-ERC Trial

The clinical trial, Non-Revascularizable IschEmic Cardiomyopathy treated with Retrograde COronary Sinus Venous DElivery of Cell TheRapy (RECOVER-ERC), is being led by Principle Investigator Dr. Leo Bockeria, Chairman of the Backulev Center http://www.bakulev.ru/en/about/director/.

The Backulev Center is Russia’s premier institute for cardiovascular surgery and cardiology. Every year the Backulev Center performs approximately 30,000 diagnostic and treatment procedures, which includes 7,000 open heart surgeries and more than 12,000 angioplasties.

The RECOVER-ERC trial will recruit 60 patients with congestive heart failure, and randomize the patients into 3 groups of 20 patients each. Group 1 will receive 50 million ERC, Group 2 will receive 100 million and Group 3 will receive 200 million. Each group will have 15 patients receiving cells and 5 patients receiving placebo. Efficacy endpoints include ECHO and MRI analysis, which will be conducted at 6 months after treatment.

“I joined Medistem and personally invested into the company because of its strong science and intellectual property position. It is this strong science that has allowed for such a rapid progression of the ERC product from discovery, to animal studies, and now to approval for initiation of efficacy finding studies,” said Dr. Vladimir Bogin, President and Chairman of Medistem, and a Yale-trained physician practicing in the USA. “As a medical doctor I see the suffering and lack of options for patients with CHF. I am proud that our team is able to offer hope.”

This is the second clinical trial that Medistem has been granted approvals for. In September 2011, the company received FDA clearance for beginning a 15 patient trial treating critical limb ischemia patients together with Dr. Michael Murphy at Indiana University.

“We are especially grateful to our Russian licensee ERCell LLC which has worked intensely with our CRO and the Backulev Center in laying down the groundwork for this approval,” said Vladimir Zaharchook, Vice President and Vice Chairman of Medistem. “To our knowledge, ERCell is the only company in Russia working on a stem cell product that can be reproducibly manufactured, frozen, and sold as a drug, not a procedure.”

“This approval is a key milestone for ERCell. Given that Russia has one of the highest incidences of heart failure per capita in the world, we are confident that we can make a difference in patients’ lives and position Russia as an international leader in cell therapy,” said Tereza Ustimova, CEO of ERCell.

About Medistem Inc.
Medistem Inc. is a biotechnology company developing technologies related to adult stem cell extraction, manipulation, and use for treating inflammatory and degenerative diseases. The company’s lead product, the endometrial regenerative cell (ERC), is a “universal donor” stem cell being developed for critical limb ischemia. A publication describing the support for use of ERC for this condition may be found at http://www.translational-medicine.com/content/pdf/1479-5876-6-45.pdf. ERC can be purchased for scientific use through Medistem’s collaborator, General Biotechnology http://www.gnrlbiotech.com/?page=catalog_endometrial_regenerative_cells.

Cautionary Statement
This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any of our securities. This press release may contain certain forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Forward-looking statements are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties, some of which cannot be predicted or quantified. Future events and actual results could differ materially from those set forth in, contemplated by, or underlying the forward-looking information. Factors which may cause actual results to differ from our forward-looking statements are discussed in our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2007 as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Stem cells secrete factors that promote muscle growth after exercise

Stem cells that aid in healing disease and injury in skeletal muscle have been found inside muscles in greater numbers after exercise, according to a new animal study at the University of Illinois.

Just one exercise session increases the number of muscle-derived mesenchymal stem cells (mMSCs) in mice, according to Beckman Institute researcher Marni Boppart. Dr. Bopart is an assistant professor of kinesiology and community health at the University of Illinois.

mMSCs can differentiate (change) into many different cell types and are found throughout the body. For the first time, this study also showed that they also facilitate tissue healing indirectly.

Bopart said, “What we’ve been able to show in this paper and our current work is that mMSCs are not directly contributing to muscle growth, but do in fact secrete a variety of different factors that positively impact muscle growth.”

Bopart believes that these secreted factors, which specifically respond to mechanical strain are an important step toward treatments that can prevent muscle loss that occurs with aging.

This work was reported in the journal PlosOne.

Child’s Amazing Recovery from Cerebral Palsy Attributed to Cord Blood Stem Cells

Toddler diagnosed with cerebral palsy shows remarkable improvement


By Bob Considine
TODAYShow.com contributor

Dallas Hextell was already a miracle to parents Cynthia and Derak, after they spent three years trying to get pregnant.

But now he is looking like a medical miracle to the rest of the world.

The two-year-old son of the Sacramento, Calif., couple was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, but is now showing fewer signs of the disorder and marked improvement after an infusion of his own stem cells — made possible by the preservation of his own cord blood shortly before birth.

Derak Hextell now believes his son will be cured of the incurable malady.

“[Dallas’ doctors] said by the age of 7, there may be no signs of cerebral palsy at all,” Hextell told TODAY co-host Meredith Vieira while holding a curious Dallas on his lap. “So he’s on his way, as far as we’re concerned.”

For Cynthia Hextell, the changes in Dallas just five days after the intravenous infusion of his cord blood cells are not coincidental. “[He’s changed] almost in every way you can imagine, just from five days afterwards saying ‘mama’ and waving,” she said. “We just feel like right now he really connects with you. “It just seemed like a fog was over him before, like he just really wasn’t there. There was kind of, like a glaze in his eyes. Now, as you can see, you can’t get anything past him.”

A difficult start

The joy of Dallas’ birth in 2006 was met with gradual heartbreak as he was unable to feed from his mother. He was constantly crying and rarely opened his eyes. At five months, Dallas had trouble balancing himself and his head was often cocked to one side.
The Hextells switched pediatricians when Dallas was eight months old and was diagnosed with cerebral palsy — a group of nonprogressive disorders that affect a person’s ability to move and to maintain balance and posture.

Various studies show that the damage to the motor-control centers of the young, developing brain that causes CP occurs during pregnancy, although there are smaller percentages of the disorder occurring during childbirth and after birth through the age of 3.

“I think it’s important to remind people that cerebral palsy has to do with the motor part of the brain and usually kids don’t deteriorate,” said Dr. Nancy Snyderman, NBC News’ chief medical editor. “But they have significant motor problems, which explains why he wasn’t a good sucker when he was breast-feeding as a baby and all of this colicky stuff that sort of confused the diagnosis.”

There is no known cure for cerebral palsy, and the treatments to help manage its debilitating effects make it the second-most expensive developmental disability to manage over a person’s lifetime, behind mental disabilities.

At 18 months, Dallas had very limited motor skills. He could not crawl, clap or sit up and he communicated only through screaming brought on mostly by pain and frustration.

Life-changing decision

During her pregnancy, Cynthia Hextell had done thorough Web research on health issues relating to childbirth and came across a pop-up ad for Cord Blood Registry, the world’s largest family cord blood stem cell bank. The San Bruno, Calf.-based company has preserved cord blood stem cells for more than 200,000 newborns throughout the world.

Hextell said the cost of saving Dallas’ cord blood — about $2,000 and not covered by insurance — was off-putting. But she ultimately registered for CBR, thinking she would rather put up the money and not use it rather than have saved it and regretted it later.

(Cord Blood Registry spokesman David Zitlow said the procedure costs $2,000 for processing and $120 per year for storage.)

“We had a perfectly healthy pregnancy, but it did take us three years to get pregnant,” Cynthia Hextell told Vieira. “It was a good chance he was going to be our only child, so that was one thing that if we were going to do it, this was our only chance.

“Heart disease ran in [Derak Hextell’s] family. I was adopted, so I knew if we ever needed something, Dallas and I were the only ones [who could provide a genetic match]. So those were things [we considered], but nothing like I thought something was going to be wrong with my child. Literally, it took us until about two weeks before our due date to make the final decision because it is expensive.”

After Dallas was diagnosed, the Hextells traveled to Duke University, where doctors were using cord blood as part of a clinical trial to treat a small number of children who had cerebral palsy or brain damage. Mrs. Hextell called some of the parents of the children and all of them reported tangible improvement in their children following the transplant of stem cells, evidenced in better speech and motor skills.

So the Hextells agreed to infuse Dallas’ own stem cells back into his bloodstream last July, a procedure that took less than an hour.

Within five days, a different child emerged — laughing, clapping, waving and reacting.

“We think [the transfusion] has a real big part to do with it because it was such a drastic change within five days of the procedure taking place,” Derak Hextell said. “It had to be because he wasn’t reaching the milestones that he’s reaching now. He was falling further and further behind.”

“Before he went to Duke, we were trying to teach him to use a walker,” Cynthia Hextell said. “Now he walks with no assistance at all.”

Saving the cells

Although Dallas’ case was not part of a controlled case study, Snyderman said it should not be overlooked in the progressing studies of stem cell treatments.

“I think the thing that medicine has not done very well is we haven’t made a big enough deal about anecdotes,” she said. “This is not a controlled case study. It’s not a randomized clinical trial. But it is a child with a diagnosis who got a transfusion of stem cells and not only stopped the deterioration of his problems, [but] he’s doing better.
“So I take it very seriously. And I think it’s an extraordinary reminder that cord blood, that stuff that is thrown away with the placenta in the emergency room as sort of medical waste, can have extraordinary applications. We’re all offered it in the delivery room.”

Snyderman didn’t have to convince one person about the promise of those stem cells.

Said Cynthia Hextell: “They’re like gold.”

Stem Cell Therapy for Multiple Sclerosis: Progress Update from Sam Harrell

From Sam Harrell’s blog: Sam In Panama

TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012

2012 Update

Coach Sam Harrell

Well, I realize there may not be many readers of my Panama blog any longer, but just in case someone does return, I wanted to post an important update.

In March 2011 when I returned from my second trip to Panama (my last blog), I soon had a MS relapse. It was the biggest setback I had experienced since my diagnosis. I spent a week in the hospital in Dallas and had numbness from my toes to my chest. When I got home, I was better – the steroids had made the numbness go down to just my lower legs, but I was practically home bound – used a walker or cane most of the time and spent most hours sitting in a chair at home – feeling like this was going to be my lifestyle for the rest of my days!

Even after going to physical therapy and doing everything I was supposed to be doing, my progress was minimal. I was fitted with a brace for my left leg to help the foot drop that was causing me to stumble. My mobility was very limited and I needed help getting most anywhere. I could not hold my new grandson unless I was sitting down, and I couldn’t walk across the room without thinking about each move.

In September of 2011 I went back to Panama for a short visit to get what Dr. Paz called a “little booster.” My mom went with me for this third trip – we stayed in the hotel by the MultiPlaza mall and had a good time since it was mom’s first trip to Panama. But the best news was what happened once we returned.

I had begun a daily log of my condition weeks before I went to Panama – mainly measuring and logging my walking and mobility – here are the exact numbers leading up to my trip and once I got back – these numbers are coming straight from my calendar log – (on a scale of 1 – 10 – how well am I’m getting around):
5,4,5,4,5,5,5,5,5+,5,(panama), 5,5+,5+,6,6,6,
7,8,6,7,7,8,7,8,8,6,6,6,7,8,7,7,8,8,8,8,8,8,7,7,7,7,8,8,8,7(end of Oct)
8,8,8,8,8,8,8+,8,9,9,8,8,7,8,7+,8,8+,8+,8+,8,7,7,8+,8,8,7+,7,7,7,7+(Nov)
7+,8+8,7+,7+,7,7+,7+,8,8,7+,8,8,7+,7,7+,7,7,7+8,8+,7+,7+,8,7+,7+,7+,7,7+,7 (Dec)
7,8,8,7,7,7,7,8,8,8,7,8,8

I know these numbers don’t mean a great deal to you, but they are huge to me – the difference in getting around at about a 5 compared to 7 & 8 is really big – numbers don’t do it justice. My mobility is MUCH improved – I don’t need the brace any longer, I walk like a normal person until I get tired, I can stay on my feet longer, I can jump rope again, I can stand and walk with my grandson in my arms, I don’t have to think to walk from one place to another, and even Kathy sees a huge difference (she has been a little hesitant about the good of stem cells).

So I am very excited and encouraged about my improvements. I can live a fairly normal life right now. And I don’t know if it’s the stem cells that made the difference or simply God’s grace and favor, but I do know it all happened right around the 3rd trip to Panama, so the stem cells had something to do with it. As I have said numerous times before, maybe God is using the stem cells to help me just as He used the Jordan River to heal Naaman’s leprosy after he dipped in it seven times.

But I do want to say this – all of these news shows (60 Minutes, 20/20, etc) coming from the US, that keep saying there are no benefits to stem cell treatments, are only showing you what the FDA and US drug companies want them to say. They have not talked to me, or Richard Humphries, or Preston Walker or many others who have seen dramatic results – we are not healed, but our quality of life is greatly improved and many people are witnessing it. (Now that I am better and getting out, people in town constantly say, “I can’t believe how well you look and how good you are doing.”)

Don’t listen to those media shows and don’t just listen to me – come see the difference!

Thanks again to all who have helped and have been encouraging in my quest to overcome this disabling disease. I encourage all of you to take your health issues into your own hands – be pro-active. What do you have to lose? Many of you may be thinking just like I was – if I do nothing, I know where I will be in 3 years.

One last bit of information – the clinic in Panama is having good but maybe mixed results with MS treatments, but they are whipping, yes whipping, arthritis! If you have a friend or loved one who is dealing with arthritis and the doctors here have said, “your only hope of being mobile again is knee replacements and/or hip replacements”, then you owe it to your friend or yourself to call me or get in touch with the stem cell clinic. What do yo have to lose? There are no side effects or dangers to stem cell treatments. Do it today!

Stay Strong!
Sam Harrell

972 268-3894

cellmedicine.com (website)

Umbilical cord stem cells may lead to new spinal cord injury and multiple sclerosis treatments

Researchers in Florida have accomplished converting umbilical cord stem cells into other cell types. According to University of Central Florida bioengineer James Hickman, it’s the first time that non-embryonic cells have accomplished this feat. His research group published this work in the January 18th issue of ACS Chemical Neuroscience.

Two major benefits of umbilical cord-derived stem cells are that they have not been shown to cause adverse immune system reactions and they pose no ethical issues since they come from a source that would be naturally discarded anyway.

Hedvika Davis, a post-doc researcher and lead author of the paper, had to search for the right chemical to coax the stem cells into becoming oligodendrocytes, which are cells that insulate nerves residing in the brain and spinal cord.

Other researchers had already shown that oligodendrocytes bind with a hormone called norepinephrine and Davis theorized that this could be the key. So she used norepinephrine and other growth factors to induce the cells to differentiate into oligodendrocytes. The only problem was that the cells were not sufficiently developed as they would be in the body.

So Davis devised a novel approach of approximating the body’s environment in the lab. By growing the cells on top of a slide, with another slide on top, Davis was able to simulate a 3-dimensional environment and grow mature oligodendrocytes.

Because oligodendrocytes produce myelin, researcher believe that this discovery might lead to treatments for multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury and diabetic neuropathy.

Blood from young mice helps older mice with multiple sclerosis

A new mouse study has shown that blood from young mice helps old mice to heal damage caused by MS.

MS causes myelin, which insulates nerve cells electrically, to become damaged. Stem cells can produce myelin but they lose efficiency in older patients.

Researchers in the UK have found a way to reverse this age-related efficiency loss. By linking the bloodstreams of young mice to old mice with myelin damage, the older stem cells were reactivated and boosted myelin production.

White blood cells from the young mice called macrophages were found at myelin damage sites in the old mice. These cells engulf and destroy pathogens and debris, including destroyed myelin.

Amy Wagers, from Harvard University says, “We know this debris inhibits regeneration, so clearing it up is important.”

Stem Cell Therapy For Spinal Cord Injury and A Layman’s Guide To Adipose Stem Cell Therapy – Stem Cell Institute Seminar in Gilbert, AZ

The Treatment of Human Diseases with Adult Stem Cells

 

We are proud to present and discuss the latest in adult stem cell treatments for diseases. Join us for informational presentations by:

Jorge Paz Rodriguez, MDA Layman’s Guide to Adipose Stem Cell Therapy

Neil Riordan, PhDAdult Stem Cell Therapy for Spinal Cord Injury

Patients will be on hand to discuss their experiences.

 

April 21, 2011
Saturday
12:30 pm – 4:00 pm

Legato Hotel
San Tan Elegante Conference Center
Gilbert, AZ 85296

Register at www.cellmedicine.eventbrite.com

(800) 980-STEM (7836)

clinic@cellmedicine.com

Excerpts from Interview with Dr. Amit Patel, Director of Regenerative Medicine, University of Utah by Thomas Ichim, Ph.D, CEO of Medistem Inc

www.thelatestwith.com

Ichim: Which one was the first stem cell trial for cardiac conditions?

Patel: It is like one of those questions like who did the first heart operation. There is a lot of debate as to what was the first to use cells plus therapy and there have been a number of trials. Myoblasts were performed in 2000, the Chinese reported work performed in 1999 or 2000, and the Ralfstock guys in Germany 2000s. So there are a number of trials, including ours, all in the 2000-2003 period that where being conducted almost simultaneously.

Ichim: Pardon me for asking because I should really know this, which one was yours?

Patel: The original CABG plus cells, which was performed in South America and India.

Ichim: Lets talk about Phase 2 trials in cardiac, we all have seen the excellent co-development deal between Cephalon and Mesoblast that happened in December of last year and we are all interested in how far are they?

Patel: The Cephalon-Mesoblast work is interesting. They are doing a 60 patient randomized trial here in the US in patients with Class II-IV heart failure. From the data thus far released there is a significant reduction in treatment group in terms of adverse events as compared to the placebo control group, they have not reported any efficacy data in terms of ejection fraction and the like.

Something unique from the data they presented was that they showed up to 2/3 of the control group were class III heart failure and 2/3 of the treatment group were class II. The early data was very interesting and promising. The safety of the data was very eloquent and reproducible. One thing that was very unique was Erik Dukker’s European large animal acute MI data which was the best in terms of scar reduction for any allogeneic MSC that I have seen to date. That data, if it pans out, in humans will be very interesting.

Ichim: How did Mesoblast administer their cells? Did they use balloon catheter in the heart failure patients?

Patel: They used NOGA mapping and administration, in chronic heart failure, both ischemic and non-ischemia. They did not do acute myocardial infarction in this trial.

Their trial had similarities with our Phase II Aastrom, which also uses NOGA administration in treatment of patients with ischemic and non ischemic heart failure. It is different in that we were looking only at class III/IV heart failure.

Ichim: How is that trial coming along?

Patel: Ours is completed from the patient recruitment and treatment perspective.

We are waiting 6 month data. Our trial was a three center trial between myself, Tim Henry and Mark O’Costa. These three centers were heavy enrollers. We had low adverse events so far. This study involves patient’s own bone marrow stem cells expanded for 12 days using Aastrom’s proprietary bioreactor system.

Ichim: Lets go back to my question about Mesoblast. Remember we were chatting at the meeting about this. There seems to be a lot of different players in this field that are all using bone marrow derived stem cells. Obviously I believe endometrial derived stem cells possess numerous advantages. But there is Osiris’s mesenchymals, there is Athersys who are using Catherine Verfaille’s cells that seem to be like mesenchymal stem cells except for their smaller size. What is the cell that Mesoblast is using? Are they just another type of mesenchymal stem cell?

Patel: By name they call them the cells mesenchymal precursors. The Mesoblast cells are unique in that they express STRO-1 and VLA-4.

In my opinion everyone’s stem cells have unique properties and surface markers be they Osiris, Mesoblast, Athersys, Allocure, and a couple other products that are bone marrow based.

What is unique to see will be the IP landscape, are they same cells or cousins? This may be a situation like the CD133 versus CD34. In this field we know that all mesenchymal stem cells are not the same but the question will be how similar or different are they when you apply them clinically?

Ichim: Did we forget to mention any other ones?

Patel: I am sure that we did, but not for want to miss them but just because they have not made enough noise. Actually the one trial we forgot to discuss was the Athersys phase I which Warren Sherman from Columbia presented using the Cricket catheter, which is adventitial delivery, that was a very safe trial. It will be interesting to see how they do in the next generation for their phase II AMI study.

Ichim: That was very interesting. That was the one with the bizarre catheter that actually had a couple of needles in it?

Patel: That catheter had one needle, it causes a microperforation to allow for perivascular injection. This is a very innovative concept since people that use the standard intracoronary delivery techniques seem to have a lot of washout of the cells.

Ichim: I don’t get it. So they are making a small hole in the blood vessel, why is it that there is no bleeding or damage?

Patel: The microperforation is way too small. You do not perforate into the pericardium. It only barely perforates. However it does require a well highly trained skill set to manipulate that catheter. If you had been listening to Dr. Sherman’s presentation you would have seen that there were no catheter-related injuries.

Ichim: (Laughing). OK, what about the large Brazilian data? That was also a session that I didn’t listen through in entirety.

Patel: That data was 10 year follow-up on several Brazilian studies. The work was initially performed in heart failure using NOGA by Hans Doneman, then they had Emerson Perin and Jim Willerson. We also had our work which involved CABG. That was groundbreaking work that set the foundations for a lot of the cardiac cell therapy that is being performed today. We are still waiting to hear the outcomes of the studies that were funded by the government of Brazil including the work on Chagas, dilated cardiomyopathy, and CABG.

Ichim: Speaking of South America, what did Jorge Tuma present?

Patel: This was incredible data that had patients who have been followed for 8 years. Cell administration was performed via the retrograde technique which we developed with him. The original experiments involved bone marrow mononuclear cells isolated by ficoll, heap-starch, CD34, etc, he is now using the Harvest system for autologous bone marrow mononuclear cell collection. He presented data on ten patients treated with this.

Ichim: This is what I love about interviews, I can ask all sorts of questions about things that I should know but I don’t. What exactly is this “retrograde technique”? I have heard you mention it several times.

Patel: We access the venous system of the heart. We occlude the outflow and deliver the biologic into the heart. What is unique is that the venous system does not get the same atherosclerosis as the arterial system. This procedure has been around since 1898..its been around from back then…the idea was can we give oxygenated blood back to the heart. It was in the 50s and 60s when Illahi started to implement this. I use this in my heart operations to give chemicals and nutrients into the heart backwards during open heart operations…so I said how

Administration of cells using the retrograde technique takes me half hour to do. This appears to be a safe and cost efficient means to deliver a biologic to the heart on incredibly sick patients.

Ichim: To put in things in perspective regarding cell administration. I know that NOGA is expensive and not too many centers have it. But how long does it take to do a NOGA administration of stem cells into the heart?

Patel: 1-2.5 hours, usually 90 minutes at best, you are manipulating the inside of the heart so there is a risk of irregular rhtyums, also low risk of perforation

Ichim: I still don’t really understand this retrograde technique. How is it that the cells actually enter the heart? Do they actually cross into the tissue?

Patel: You block the outflow of the heart and under pressure you push the cells into the venous system. So you have created a column of cells. You have antegrade blood flow and retrograde stop flow, so the cells either go into the tissue or perforate the sinus…perforate the sinus is very rare, less than 1 % in over a couple hundred patients. These are microperforations in the venous system so it doesn’t require emergent surgery…all of the patients in which this has occurred have done well.

Juventas presented some data in large animals in which the SDF plasmid showed a significant uprgulation using retrograde techniques in contrast to other means of delivery.

Ichim: To switch topics I saw you on CNN about spraying stem cells on poor patients with bad burns, how do the cells go inside of the tissue?

Patel: We add calcium and thrombin, it looks like jello if you were to spray it into the petri disue, so you have retention by tissue adhesion and the mechanical properties of the collagen, thrombin and calcium, so you are creating a matrix for your biologic. So it really is spray on and it actually sticks there.

Ichim: I remember you now based in Utah, what ever happened to that company in your neck of the woods Allocure? How are they doing these days?

Patel: The last I heard they completed Phase I trial here in Utah, they were giving at the time of heart surgery for renal production. They have a bone marrow mesenchymal cell product. The trial is completed, we are looking to see what their next study will be. Will the stick to renal protection or will they follow other companies by entering CLI, heart failure, etc.

Ichim: You know, I was impressed by that company C3 or something like that, they were using differentiated cells for heart?

Patel: That was a Phase I/II trial by Joseph Bartnak where they have a bone marrow mesenchymal cell that was cultured in a procardiac cocktail. It was administered by noga or endocardial mapping. And again the data looked interesting…we look forward to their next trial and when they come to US

Ichim: What they were doing was really new in my humble opinion. It seems to me like everyone in this field is administering undifferentiated cells based on the belief or hope that the damaged tissue will program the undifferentiated stem cell to become a cardiomyocyte. To your knowledge are there other people using differentiated or semi-differentiated cells?

Patel: Yes of course. There is Capricor, Eduardo Marban’s company. They are taking a biopsy of the patient’s own heart, grow up the cells and put them back in. They don’t put the cardiospheres back in because they are too large but put in some cells derived from cardiosphere grown in vitro. One of the issues they are facing is that their procedure is very much dependent on the starting material. They were able to do biopsy but because there was large variability in the weight of the starting tissue, it is important to figure out how to get enough

Ichim: Conceptually it seems counter-intuative to take out heart from a patient with heart failure !

Patel: People do right heart biopsy in transplant patients, doing native heart biopsy you are always concerned about damaging the valve. Raj who was doing the procedure for them is a great interventionalist, but have to make sure that the procedure is designed so that other interventionalists who may not have his skill set can do it. The concept is great but manufacturing and reproducibility is important.

The Key to Better Health May Lie in Adult Stem Cells

One of the oldest people in the world, Sarah Knauss (119 years old), might have had more than just “good genes.” “Adult stem cells – known for their healing and regenerative properties – might hold the key to a long and healthy life,” says Wayne Marasco, MD, PhD, of Dana-Farber at the recent International Vatican Conference on Adult Stem Cells in Vatican City, Italy.

“We have learned in the past 10 years that there are all kinds of stem cells that circulate in the blood – they aren’t just found in bone marrow,” said Marasco, of Dana-Farber’s Department of Cancer Immunology and AIDS. “There are dozens of studies that support the fact that this is a large and dynamic population of cells that might help us keep our bodies healthy for a longer period of time.”

Stem cells are assigned to specialized zones in the body and called into action when the body faces stress or even a minor injury. For example, when someone has a heart attack or stroke, an agent is released into the blood, recruiting stem cells and directing them to the damaged tissue.

In addition to their healing powers, stem cell levels are also an indicator of future health. Studies have shown that a person’s level of endothelial progenitor cells, stem cells that form the tissues that line blood vessels, can predict whether or not a patient who has a heart attack will die or need major hospitalization.

Since stem cell levels can be modified through diet, lifestyle changes, or drugs, monitoring stem cells could prevent certain health risks and delay disease from occurring.

“The bottom line is that stem cells may be a better indicator of health and aging than the regular annual blood test, which was developed 50 years ago,” Marasco says. “Now that we know more about adult stem cells, this should be part of a routine test.”

Stem cell therapy may not be too far off in the future. Marasco says that doctors will soon be able to check stem cell levels in a drop of blood, using a finger-prick test much like those used by diabetics. Studies are also beginning to show the benefits of an FDA-approved molecule that improves the healing powers of stem cells, and the NIH has launched a new program that may lead to discoveries of already approved drugs that can boost adult stem cells.

“We can age gracefully, but we can also keep the body revitalized,” Marasco said. “The whole purpose of monitoring is to replenish our stem cells so that we can get more healthy years out of them.”

Stem Cells May Reverse Age-Related Multiple Sclerosis Effects

Proof-of-principle study provides hope for stimulating remyelination

Scientists at Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard University, and the University of Cambridge have found that the age-related impairment of the body’s ability to replace protective myelin sheaths, which normally surround nerve fibers and allow them to send signals properly, may be reversible, offering new hope that therapeutic strategies aimed at restoring efficient regeneration can be effective in the central nervous system throughout life.

In a proof-of-principle study published in the journal Cell Stem Cell, the researchers report that defects in the regeneration of the myelin sheaths surrounding nerves, which are lost in diseases such as multiple sclerosis may be at least partially corrected following exposure of an old animal to the circulatory system of a young animal. Myelin is a fatty substance that protects nerves and aids in the quick transmission of signals between nerve cells.

Using a surgical technique, the researchers introduced an experimental demyelinating injury in the spinal cord of an old mouse, creating small areas of myelin loss, and then exposed those areas to cells found the blood of a young mouse. By doing so, they found that the influx of certain immune cells, called macrophages, from the young mouse helped resident stem cells restore effective remyelination in the old mouse’s spinal cord. This “rejuvenating” effect of young immune cells was mediated in part by the greater efficiency of the young cells in clearing away myelin debris created by the demyelinating injury. Prior studies have shown that this debris impedes the regeneration of myelin.

“Aging impairs regenerative potential in the central nervous system,” says author Amy J. Wagers, PhD, an associate professor of stem cell and regenerative biology at Harvard University and Joslin, who co-led the study with Professor Robin Franklin, director of the MS Society’s Cambridge Centre for Myelin Repair at the University of Cambridge. “This impairment can be reversed, however, suggesting that the eventual development of cell-based or drug-based interventions that mimic the rejuvenation signals found in our study could be used therapeutically.”

This could be particularly useful, she adds, in treating MS, which typically spans many decades of life, and thus is likely to be influenced by age-dependent reductions in the ability of myelin to regenerate. In MS, the body’s own immune system attacks the myelin sheath and prevents nerve fibers in the brain from sending signals properly, which can cause mild symptoms such as limb numbness or more serious ones like losing the ability to walk or speak. As people with MS age, remyelination decreases significantly, eventually causing permanent loss of nerve fibers.

“For MS sufferers,” says Franklin, “this means that, in theory, regenerative therapies will work throughout the duration of the disease. Specifically, it means that remyelination therapies do not need to be based on stem cell transplantation since the stem cells already present in the brain and spinal cord can be made to regenerate myelin, regardless of a person’s age.”

Other Joslin co-authors of the study were Tata Nageswara Rao and Jennifer L. Shadrach.

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