3 Day Adult Stem Cell Conference Focuses on Fat Derived Stem Cells

High blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease, and other numerous health problems can be the result if there is too much fat in a person’s body. But few would guess that the same fat that that contributes to a long and depressing list of health problems also has life saving potential.

The potential healing power stored within fat is being discussed at a conference in Indianapolis this week. About 150 medical researchers will be in attendance. Investors are dreaming about huge returns as well.

Using stem cells taken from a person’s own body fat, researchers hope to someday develop treatments for poor circulation in legs, heart attacks, and even obesity.

Using stem cells to treat the joints of horses and dogs, other research has focused on animal applications.

“It’s easy to get fat, even from thin people,” said Dr. Keith March, a professor of medicine at Indiana University known for his research on adult stem cells harvested from fat. “It’s a very readily available source. You can work with the cells from a person’s own body.”

During the annual conference of the medical society International Federation of Adipose Therapeutics and Science at the Hyatt Regency, researchers coming from more than a dozen countries, will present their findings today through Saturday.

However, more than just medical professors are being drawn to the IFATS conference in Indy. Conference sponsors include, Cook Medical, device makers Biomet, and drug giant Eli Lilly. All three are among Indiana’s leading health-care companies. Also attending and sponsoring the event are medical start-ups and a number of venture capitalists.

The adult stem cell industry is still small and mostly unprofitable despite having so many therapies in the research stage.

Working on treating heart disease and other conditions using fat derived stem cells is IFATS sponsor Cytori Therapeutics. But the California based company lost $12.7 million on product revenue of just $792,000 in the first half of 2007.

Blockbuster treatments and big payoffs for investors could eventually be the result of the millions being invested by private sources and the government according to experts.

“There’s really no cure for many of the diseases that we are working on,” said Phillip Singerman, managing director of Toucan Capital, a Maryland venture capital firm that sponsors IFATS conferences. “That’s really the promise of stem cells.”

With the potential to develop into specific cell types found in the body such as the heart, nerve tissue, blood, muscle, and other tissues, stem cells are immature cells with great capacity to differentiate. When taking cells from a living patient, the cells are referred to as adult stem cells. This is the type of non-controversial cell that IFATS is focused on.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, stem cells derived from human embryos are referred to as embryonic stem cells. Since a human embryo must be destroyed to harvest the cells, their use is considered controversial.

Fat is a non-controversial and plentiful source of stem cells says March, who is also president of IFATS.

Liposuction is used to extract fat from a patient’s abdomen, buttocks or thigh. About a million support cells can be extracted from only one gram of fat. Many of these support cells are stem cells.

The turn around time for patient treatment is quick with this type of cell according to March.

“They don’t have to be cultured extensively,” he said.

According to the National Institutes for Health, blood cancers, tumors and other conditions have been treated for decades using bone marrow derived adult blood-forming stem cells. But many more potentially life saving treatments could be developed according to experts and investors.

“We have seen opportunities, both in Indiana and nationally, that are making progress and beginning to show a more definite link between their research and eventual therapies,” said Greg Maurer, managing director of Heron Capital, an Indianapolis venture capital firm.

But years can stand in the way for treatments to be fully tested in humans before receiving final approval from the Food and Drug Administration. The road from animal models to humans is a tricky path.

But humans are already involved as subjects for some of the research that is being presented at the IFATS conference.

A treatment for heart attack victims who are injected with stem cells shortly after an attack is being tested by a research team from Erasmus University Medical Center in the Netherlands.

In the Dutch study, stem cells are extracted from fat that has been removed via liposuction. The cells are then injected into the heart muscle within 24 hours of the heart attack.

March said that since the cells secrete proteins and nutrients that preserve the existing heart muscle cells, the adult stem cells may be able to limit the damage to the patient’s heart muscle. New heart muscle cells could also be created by the stem cells added March.

Treating dogs for osteoarthritis is another research project that is being presented at IFATS. The California-based Vet-Stem, a company backed by Toucan Capital also uses stem cells to treat orthopedic injuries in horses.

In order to keep up with the latest research, it is important for Toucan to attend conferences such as IFATS said Singerman of Toucan Capital. 14 stem-cell-related companies have already been funded by Toucan which is a $120 million venture capital fund.

“The science is really at the cutting edge,” he said. “Every day there are new discoveries and new technologies.”

Smooth Muscle or Skeletal Muscle? Stem Cells Use Myocardin to Decide

According to a study published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers have discovered a key protein that controls how stem cells “choose” to become smooth muscle cells that support blood vessels or skeletal muscle cells that move limbs. The results may point in the direction of new treatments for diseases that involve the creation of new blood vessels from stem cell reserves that would otherwise replace worn out skeletal muscle in addition to providing insight into the development of muscle types in the human fetus. New treatments could also be developed for cancer and atherosclerosis.

Physician researchers should start watching to see if a previously undetected side effect exists since the newly discovered mechanism also suggests that some current cancer treatments may weaken muscle.

With as many as 400 cell types in millions of combinations, humans develop from a single cell into a complex being thanks to stem cells. The potential to develop into every kind of human cell is locked within the fertilized embryo, or original single human cell. As we develop in the womb, successive generations of stem cells specialize (differentiate), with each group able to become fewer and fewer cell types.

The ability to become smooth muscle, skeletal muscle, blood, or bone is a characteristic of a set of mostly differentiated stem cells. Ready to differentiate into replacement parts depending on the stimuli they receive, many human tissues keep a reserve of stem cells on hand in adulthood. The stem cells take the required route if the body signals that skeletal muscle needs replacing. The same stem cells may become smooth muscle that supports the lining of blood vessels if tissues signal for more blood vessels.

A transcription factor called Myocardin may be the master regulator of whether stem cells become skeletal or smooth muscle. The discovery was made by a team of collaborating researchers at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and the Aab Cardiovascular Research Institute at the University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry. Myocardin is a transcription factor, a protein designed to associate with a section of the DNA code, and to turn the expression of that gene on or off. Smooth muscle cells were originally thought to be the only tissue affected by Myocardin which was believed to be a protein that promoted cell growth by turning regulatory genes on. Myocardin is shown to also turn off genes that make skeletal muscle in the PNAS report.

“These findings could eventually lead to stem-cell based therapies where researchers take control of what the stem cell does once implanted through the action of transcription factors like myocardin, unlike current therapies that “hope” the stem cell will take a correct differentiation path to fight disease,” said Joseph M. Miano, Ph.D., senior author of the paper and associate professor within the Aab Cardiovascular Research Institute at the University of Rochester Medical Center “More specifically, many diseases are driven by whether stem cells decide to become skeletal muscle, or instead to become part of new blood vessel formation. These discoveries have created a new wing of medical research that seeks to understand the genetic signals that turn on such stem cell replacement programs.”

Atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, for instance, becomes likely to cause heart attack or stroke when cholesterol-driven plaques that build up inside of arteries become fragile. Tissue death occurs when clots that block arteries develop from these plaques interact with circulating factors due to arterial rupture. In theory, the plaques could be strengthened to prevent rupture by injecting stem cells programmed to become smooth muscle said Miano.

Conversely, in order to grow, tumors must be able to grow blood vessels. New blood vessels are built by turning on vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), the tumor accomplishes this by sending signals for stem cells to form smooth muscle in combination with other signals.

Would manipulating myocardin along with VEGF interfere with tumor growth by cutting off its blood supply?

Do current VEGF-based treatments kick myocardin into action, creating smooth muscle instead of continually repairing worn out skeletal muscle?

Since VEGF is used experimentally to treat peripheral artery disease and coronary artery disease, is this treatment reducing the skeletal muscle strength of these patients?

Miano’s team found that myocardin is a bi-functional developmental switch with the ability to both turn off the genes that turn stem cells into skeletal muscle as well as turn on a set of genes that turns stem cells into smooth muscle. Providing the biological context that made sense of Miano’s finding was accomplished by applying the same idea to the development of the fetus via transgenic mouse studies by the team at Southwestern.

A group of cells in the human fetus known to develop into skeletal muscle are know as the somite. This has been the focus of research at many institutions. Myocardin is expressed briefly in the somite during development in mice, but then disappears from that region of the fetus. This was determined during cell lineage and tracking studies performed by the Southwestern team. This current data leads to the surprising theory that both skeletal and smooth muscle cells come from the same stem cell region. To make the new human’s supply of smooth muscle cells, Myocardin briefly switches on. Blood vessels are formed when the cells migrate to another area. Then allowing the somite to continue differentiating into skeletal muscle, Myocardin quickly shuts off. Skeletal muscle would not develop properly if the turn off did not occur.

Seeking to define ancient sections of our genetic code that may soon be as important to medical science as genes has been the focus of many teams including Miano’s in recent years. How small regulatory DNA sequences tell genes where, when and to what degree to “turn on” in combination with enzymes that seek them out has been the concern of this new wave of research. This is in contrast to putting the spotlight on on how genes work.

The workhorses that make up the body’s organs and carry its signals; genes are the chains of deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA) that encode instructions for the building of proteins. The potential to create new classes of treatment for nerve disorders and heart failure are a side effect of the growing knowledge of how regulatory sequences control gene behavior. Once thought of as “junk DNA”, regulatory sequences are emerging as an important part of the non-gene majority of human genetic material. The complete set of DNA sequences that regulate the precise turning on and off of genes is referred to as theregulome and it’s study presents a new frontier in genetic research.

In an article by Miano and team published February 2006 in the journal Genome Research, they described one such regulatory sequence: the CArG box. The nucleotide building blocks of DNA chains may contain any one of four nucleobases: adenine (A), thymine (T), guanine (G) and cytosine (C). Any sequence of code starting with 2 Cs, followed by any combination of 6 As or Ts, and ending in 2 Gs is a CArG box.

Occurring approximately three million times throughout the human DNA blueprint, all together there are 1,216 variations of CArG box according to Miano. CArG boxes exert their influence over genes because they are “shaped” to partner with a nuclear protein called serum response factor (SRF) and several other proteins within a genetic regulatory network, including Myocardin. As many as sixty genes so far have been found to be influenced by the CArG-SRF, including many involved in heart cell and blood vessel function.

Past studies had determined that myocardin is a co-factor with SRF in CArG-Box mediated genetic regulation of stem cells. Through CArG box interaction, researchers believed myocardin partnered with SRF to turn on smooth muscle genes until now. But serving as a potent silencer of gene expression for the stem cell to skeletal muscle gene program, the current findings suggest that myocardin has a second role, independent of its partnership with CARG-SRF.

“With its dual action, myocardin is an early example of the efficiency and elegance of the system of genetic controls, where one factor has more than one complementary effect on the development of the body,” said Eric Olson, Ph.D., chair of the Department of Molecular Biology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, and also senior author of the study.

Myasthenia Gravis Treated with Bone Marrow Stem Cells

By Regina Sass, University of California – San Diego Medical Center

With the potential to have great impact on individuals who suffer from Myasthenia Gravis, an extremely rare bone marrow transplant has been performed by doctors at The Bone Marrow Transplant Program at University of California, San Diego Medical Center. This is the first time the operation has been attempted by any hospital in the western part of the United States.

The patient’s own immune system views itself as a foreign body and attacks itself in the case of Myasthenia Gravis. Of all the neuromuscular autoimmune diseases, it is one of the most rare. Making it impossible for the muscles to contract, the condition interrupts the normal transmission of nerve impulses to the muscles. Additionally, the muscles that control breathing can’t work right when the nerve impulses do not work right.

The Myasthenia Gravis Foundation of America believes the condition is very much under diagnosed and there are many individuals who do not know they have it opposing the statistics that state that 20 out of every 100,000 Americans have been diagnosed with MG.

The procedure gives patients purified blood forming stem cells after their existing stem cells are destroyed by chemotherapy. The immune system regains cells that do not attack the body after the modified transplant stem cells build new bone marrow, correct signaling pattern to the immune system.

Three prior procedures have been performed at the Northwestern University Hospital in Chicago. Dr. Martin Glasser, M.D., was the patient treated at UC-San Diego, marking the 4th procedure of this kind ever performed in history. At UCSD Medical Center, he has been receiving plasmapheresis treatments. Kidney failure patients go through a dialysis procedure, and plasmapheresis is similar. Over a short period of time, it can deliver benefit.

His bone marrow had to be obliterated in order to get him ready for the transplant. Most of the T cells in his body had to be destroyed. The theory is that new stem cells will not get the message to attack if the T cells are destroyed before the new stem cells are introduced. The immune system is renewed as the transplanted stem cells build new bone marrow.

8 million pure stem cells were yielded after 16 million cells were initially harvested and processed through a special filtering device. The stem cells have the best chance to produce a line of healthy blood cells when they are at this very early stage in their development. To protect against infection, patients are required to take antibiotics after the transplant is completed. Until the immune system is considered to be completely recovered, patients must maintain a strict diet and stay away from large crowds of people to avoid possible infection and illness. 3 months is the average amount of time predicted for this post transplant protocol.

Some tissue repair maybe happening to Dr. Glasser according to doctors. Feeling has returned to his feet following the transplant where he previously had no sensation.

The team who performed the operation was Ewa Carrier, M.D., Arnold Gass, M.D., professor of medicine at Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, Geoffrey Sheehan, M.D., UCSD professor of neurosciences and myasthenia gravis specialist and David Ward, M.D., UCSD professor of medicine and Apheresis program founder.

University of Florida to Test CD34+ Stem Cells for Heart Disease

To investigate if blood flow can be restored to the heart by promoting new blood vessels to grow, University of Florida researchers are planning to test a therapy in which stem cells are injected into the hearts of people with daily chest pain and severe coronary artery disease.

Procedures such as bypass surgery or angioplasty were ineffective on these particular patients. Traditional medications also failed to restore blood flow to the hearts of these individuals.

“The general idea is that by providing these cells of blood vessel origin, we hope to either generate new blood vessels from the growth of these implanted cells or stimulate the heart to regenerate new blood vessels from the cells that reside in it,” Carl J. Pepine, lead author of the study, M.D., chief of cardiovascular medicine at UF’s College of Medicine said.

“It’s not completely clear whether it’s the actual cell itself that would do this or whether it’s just the milieu and the chemical signals that occur from the cells that would result in this,” he said.

The forthcoming double blind, placebo-controlled study is known as the Autologous Cellular Therapy CD34-Chronic Myocardial Ischemia Trial, or ACT34-CMI.

Chronic reductions in blood flow to the heart will be investigated. Particularly, the effectiveness and safety of using a patient’s own stem cells to treat this condition will be the focus of the study. 15 patients are enrolled to determine if the treatment will improve symptoms and long-term outcomes.

Exercise tolerance, improvements in quality of life, and whether or not the heart function improves will all be part of the evaluation.

The study involves a number of screening tests, followed by stem cells extraction. In order for stem cell collection to occur, a series of protein injections are administered to the patients that promote the stem cells release from be bone marrow, and into the peripheral blood.

During a procedure called apheresis, the stem cells which are called CD34+ stem cells, are harvested from the patient. Theses cells help stimulate blood vessel growth said Chris Cogle, an assistant professor of medicine at the UF’s College of Medicine Program in Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine.

A placebo, or one of two different dosing levels of stem cells will be randomly administered to each respective patient.

“Physicians will use a catheter-based electrical mapping system to find muscle they think is still viable but not functioning,” said R. David Anderson, an associate professor of medicine at UF and director of interventional cardiology.

Over the course of a year following the procedure, patients will be periodically evaluated by magnetic resonance imaging and echocardiography.

One trial focuses on patients with congestive heart failure or chronic chest pain that has not responded to traditional treatment, the second trial focuses on patients who have had a heart attack within a week preceding study enrollment, and the third focuses on patients whose heart attack occurred within the preceding two to three weeks.

Novel Mutiple Sclerosis Stem Cell Study Begins

Physorg

A small group of patients with multiple sclerosis were enrolled in a new pilot clinical trial to test bone marrow stem cell therapy at Frenchay Hospital. The aim of the trial is to find out what effects, good or bad, it has on patients with MS, and their disability. It is being conducted by the University of Bristol and North Bristol NHS Trust.

Bone marrow is of great interest to those working to develop new treatments for many diseases, including those affecting the nervous system since the marrow is known to contain stem cells capable of replacing cells in many types of tissues and organs.

Until now, patients have not been treated in this manner, but laboratory studies in Bristol and elsewhere have worked with similar cells to determine potential benefits to aid repair in multiple sclerosis.

The trial is being led by the University of Bristol and Neil Scolding who is a Professor of Clinical Neurosciences for North Bristol NHS Trust.

He said: “We believe this form of adult stem cell treatment, carried out in collaboration with colleagues in the Bone Marrow Transplant Unit at the BRI, will be safe and well-tolerated but, because patients with MS have never had this treatment before, safety has to be proven before any further studies of larger numbers of patients can take place.”

“We will therefore be monitoring this small number of patients extremely carefully over the next 9-12 months. Provided, as is envisaged, we do not find serious adverse effects, we hope to raise the funds to undertake a larger study to examine the effectiveness of such treatment in MS.”

To determine general fitness and degree of disability from MS, patients meeting the initial entry criteria were assessed in the Neurology department and the Burden Centre at Frenchay Hospital.

Frenchay and also at The Hammersmith Hospital in London, various types of brain scans were conducted. Then the patients underwent bone marrow collection under a short general anesthetic at the Bone Marrow Transplant Unit at the BRI.

Via a vein in the arm, the stem cells are delivered back to the patient later the same day after they have been processed from the marrow.

A range of various monitoring tests and scans at Frenchay and in London are then carried out over the following weeks and months.

Novel Multiple Sclerosis Stem Cell Study Begins

A small group of patients with multiple sclerosis were enrolled in a new pilot clinical trial to test bone marrow stem cell therapy at Frenchay Hospital. The aim of the trial is to find out what effects, good or bad, it has on patients with MS, and their disability. It is being conducted by the University of Bristol and North Bristol NHS Trust.

Bone marrow is of great interest to those working to develop new treatments for many diseases, including those affecting the nervous system since the marrow is known to contain stem cells capable of replacing cells in many types of tissues and organs.

Until now, patients have not been treated in this manner, but laboratory studies in Bristol and elsewhere have worked with similar cells to determine potential benefits to aid repair in multiple sclerosis.

The trial is being led by the University of Bristol and Neil Scolding who is a Professor of Clinical Neurosciences for North Bristol NHS Trust.

He said:

Stem Cell’s at the Heart of Bioartificial Liver

The successful removal of ammonia, a highly toxic by-product which causes brain damage, coma, and even death, and the production of urea was announced today by HepaLife Technologies, Inc. They developed a first-of-its-kind artificial liver device where the company’s patented PICM-19 liver stem cells were placed inside its proprietary artificial liver device to produce the positive results.

“Today’s results demonstrate that, while inside our bioartificial liver device, HepaLife’s PICM-19 cells are able to produce substantial amounts of urea and remove toxic ammonia, while remaining healthy, and replicating important liver-like functions,” stated Mr. Frank Menzler, President and CEO of HepaLife. “This is a significant achievement that marks a major milestone in the development of our artificial liver device.”

“These new results have certainly exceeded our early performance expectations of the HepaLife bioartificial liver design. Our goal is to now further evaluate the HepaLife bioartificial liver system in-vitro and in-vivo, and continue to move closer to an application with the Food and Drug Administration for our cell-based device.”

Similar to the functions mimicked by HepaLife’s PICM-19 cells in today’s research outcomes, the biological cells inside the device which are responsible for truly replicating and performing the functions of the human liver are the most vital component of the artificial liver device, not the actual mechanical hardware say researchers.

Over the entire duration of the study, the system successfully produced significant amounts urea and liver-specific protein such as albumin while removing toxic ammonia confirmed research data from experiments with the PICM-19 cells inside HepaLife’s artificial liver device. Reaching peak levels at termination of the study after two weeks, the production of urea and albumin increased over time, marking the most important outcome of the study.

Since cells which are not contact-inhibited tend to become cancerous, an important indicator if normal cell growth was that the PICM-19 liver cells remained contact-inhibited. This confirmed earlier findings in observations of cell replication and growth. The HepaLife’s PICM-19 cells inside its liver device system remained non-tumorigenic.

An indication of the cells’ physical form and structure was observed in the same test. Normal morphology was displayed as the HepaLife’s PICM-19 liver stem cells successfully differentiated into hepatocytes (liver cells).

Researchers analyzed levels of lactate and glucose — indicators of metabolic function — alongside oxygen and carbon dioxide, respectively, when evaluating the chemical function and overall health of the PICM-19 liver cells inside HepaLife’s bioartificial liver system. Throughout the duration of the studies, these monitored levels remained favorably within targeted parameters in all cases.

“These results suggest that HepaLife’s bioartificial liver system is an artificially created, ‘living biosystem’ — our goal from the early beginning — with cells that behave as we have long desired for our artificial liver device,” concluded Mr. Menzler.

Intended for the treatment of liver failure, the HepaLife(TM) Bioartificial Liver device consists of three basic components: (1), the HepaDrive(TM), a perfusion system for pumping the patient’s plasma through the bioreactor while controlling gas supply and temperature for best possible performance of the cells; (2)the bioreactor, a unit filled with PICM-19 cells which biologically mimic the liver’s function; and (3) a plasma filter, separating the patient’s blood into blood plasma and blood cells.

HepaLife is developing the first-of-its-kind bioartificial liver while incorporating the PICM-19 cell line. Designed to operate outside the patient’s body HepaLife’s bioartificial liver is currently under development. The bioartificial liver processes the patient’s blood-plasma by removing toxins, enhancing metabolic function, and ultimately, imitates the liver’s natural function.

The bioartificial liver is envisioned to mimic important functions of the human liver by circulating the patient’s blood inside the device, where it is exposed to HepaLife’s patented PICM-19 liver stem cells.

Stem Cell Therapy for Skin

Concentrating on the latest discoveries in skin science and regenerative medicine, Paris hosted Stem Cells and the Skin last week. The event marked the 7th such symposium for LVMH Research.

Scientists from Europe and the United States were invited to discuss the latest developments in stem cell therapy and its possible benefits to skin care. French luxury consumer group Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy used its research arm to organize the event.

Stem cells are at the heart of organ development and tissue repair because they have the potential to differentiate into different and specialized cells.

For a range of degenerative conditions and injuries such as premature baldness, severe burns, and more serious conditions such as heart disease and Parkinson’s; stem cell treatment promises benefits. Recent findings in therapeutic applications and the advances in stem cell research for the science of the skin were explored and implications discussed at LVMH’s symposium.

Cedric Blanpain’s work on the characterization, activation and differentiation of the epidermal stem cell was presented. Blanpain works at the Interdisciplinary Research Institute, at Free University of Brussels, in Belgium.

Residing in a portion of the hair follicle called the bulge, special multipotent follicular stem cells were the focus of Blanpain’s research. Real therapeutic benefits may come form these cells in the future because of their multipotency; the fact that they can divide into many different cell types.

To help pinpoint the processes that lead to hair regeneration, the project isolates the bulge stem cells, and investigates the optimal conditions for in vitro clonal analyses.

Additionally, a presentation entitled ‘Epidermal Basal Layer: the Regenerative Stem Cell Skin Compartment’ was given by Carlo Pincelli, from the Institute of Dermatology, at the University of Moderna and Reggio Emilia, in Modena, Italy.

Pincelli’s work focuses on investigating the biochemicals that help to regulate the survival and division of the stem cells, which reside on the basal layer of the skin in between the hair follicles.

The protein survivin and high levels of a transmembrane receptor called beta1-integrin were isolated by Pincelli and his team. These two components appear to be important for the division and differentiation of the stem cells.

For the treatment of skin disorders and burns, stem cell therapy could be used for therapeutic purposes. Improved knowledge of how the skin renews itself and how the stem cells function highlight this fact.

Concentrating on the possibility of in-vivo ‘reconstructed’ skin, a concept which LVMH feels would have powerful implications for our ageing society was the final discussion of the symposium. The catalyst was the question “The reconstructed man, a probable future?” by Eric Perrier, the Executive Vice President of LVMH’s R&D center.

Stem Cells from Testicles – Another Non-Controversial Breakthrough

Stem cell taken from men’s testicles could be transformed into a wide range of tissue types to help fight disease. United States researchers have come up with a new use for the rich source of stem cells.

The cells were reprogrammed to be heart cells, blood vessels, and other tissues after scientists isolated and extracted them form the testes of male mice.

Cancer, heart disease, strokes, Parkinson’s disease and other conditions could all be treated if the results can be duplicated using in humans. The ethical concerns surrounding embryonic stem cells would also be negated by this breakthrough.

Shahin Rafii continued to work long and hard on the project since the testes provide such a potentially rich source of stem cells. He spent years working and now the payoff is evident. Rafii is a doctor at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York.

“Testes are designed to generate a lot of sperm and they have these germ cells,” he said.

“So germ cells are designed also in a way to give us two different tissues as well so we were able to get a germ cell from testes and instruct them to become other tissues.”

Humans will also benefit because the results are transferable to humans said Dr. Rafii.

“It can easily be applied to a human in near future,” he said.

Subjects should not be difficult to find Rafii added.

“If I had end stage heart disease, I would think, take all my testes, all right? So it is a no-brainer,” he said.

The journal Nature has published Dr. Rafii’s research.

While the work is promising it will be some time before the results could be reproduced in humans said Peter Schofield, who is the executive director of the Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute in Sydney.

“I think there’s still quite a bit of experimental work to be done,” he said.

“The mouse experiments used a number of techniques which are possible in mouse embryology but would not in any way be translatable to potential human treatment today.”

“But the important thing is that the experiments showed was that it was possible.”

Creating non-embryonic stem cells carries a high level of interest says Professor Schofield.

“Certainly the comments that came out from the researchers’ labs in the United States perhaps are a little bit over-selling around the potential benefits of adult versus embryonic stem cells,” he said.

“I guess the situation here in Australia is that both of them are now permitted under various strong licensing regimes and the technology that delivers the clinical benefits will obviously be the one that works.”

“This is really important research because it shows that there is another possible way of reprogramming adult stem cells. In the mouse it shows that those cells were able to form important other organs.”

“There’s still a lot of steps before that could be done in a human situation, but the fact that it has been done is both very exciting and offers a lot of promise.”

For men, it is a possible breakthrough that will manifest itself in the future. But women should not be disappointed either says Dr. Rafii. They will also benefit.

“In women also this stem cell exists but the number is very, very low and we hope that eventually we can be able to get these stem cells from their ovaries as well,” he said.

“Also another point – some men can give stem cells to compatible, genetically compatible females so it still can be applied for women as well.”

Stem Cell Therapy Market to Explode by 2017

A recent report conducted by the Millennium Research Group (MRG) has determined that the industry is set to explode. Their detailed analysis, US Markets for Stem Cell Therapies 2007, determined that as products are approved in the U.S., the market will grow rapidly despite its current state of infancy. By 2017, almost 90 products are expected to be available, despite the fact that only two are on the market today.

Stem cells have the potential to cure diseases that are currently incurable and can provide lasting treatments for chronic disorders. This is due to their regenerative capabilities. Blackstone Medical’s Trinity and US-Osiris Therapeutics’ Osteocel were the only two products available in the U.S. in 2007. Both are orthopedic products and over $25 million in revenues were earned by these therapies alone in 2007.

Public acceptance, regulatory approval, and the success of clinical trials will determine how the rest of the U.S. market for stem cell therapies develops. Between 2009 and 2013, the first tissue and organ, neurological, diabetes, and cardiovascular stem cell therapies are expected to enter the market. These products will have vast market potential and offer hope to patients by opening up a new realm of treatable disorders.

“This market has almost everything going its way”, says Chris Schutz, senior analyst at MRG. “The big question mark however is the political and public support. The prevalence of potentially treatable disorders, unmet medical needs, rising health care costs, growth in the aging population, and the success of the first stem cell therapy products are all factors that will drive this market upward through 2017.”

Osiris Therapeutics, Blackstone Medical, Geron, Harvest Technologies, Advanced Cell Technologies, Aastrom Biosciences, Cytori Therapeutics, International Stem Cell Corporation, and Arteriocyte, are the names mentioned in the US Markets for Stem Cell Therapies 2007 report as companies offering or developing products for the stem cell therapy market.

Derived from highly proliferative tissues, stem cells are primal cells. In the human body, every organ, cell, and tissue is created by these stem cells. Cancer, diabetes, neurological disease, orthopedic degenerative disease, retinal disease, cardiovascular disease, and other chronic and autoimmune disorders can potentially be cured by stem cells because of their universality and ability to repair or replace damaged tissue.