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Global Cartilage Repair Market 2017-2021 – Gene Therapy and Stem Cell Therapy is the latest Market Trend Making … – Business Wire (press release)

August 30th, 2017 10:42 am

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Global Cartilage Repair Market 2017-2021" report has been added to Research and Markets' offering.

The global cartilage repair market to grow at a CAGR of 11.59 % during the period 2017-2021.

The treatment of articular cartilage has evolved tremendously in the past decade. Reparative and restorative methods have been developed to address the significant source of morbidity in the young and active patients. Articular cartilage injury can be focal, which is localized or systemic. Procedures are being developed not only to alleviate the symptoms associated with articular cartilage defects but also to limit the progression of cartilage damages into degenerative diseases.

According to the report, one of the major drivers for this market is Rising incidence of accidental injuries. Globally, the road traffic injuries are increasing, with post complicated symptoms such as weakening of tendons, cartilage tear, and orthopedic issues.

The latest trend gaining momentum in the market is Gene therapy and stem cell therapy. Gene therapy is one of the promising fields in the cartilage repair. Many clinical studies have been performed for cartilage repair. The researchers are trying to develop gene therapy for cartilage repair and currently been investigated for clinical application.

Further, the report states that one of the major factors hindering the growth of this market is Product side effects. Surgeons use cartilage repair products such as tissue scaffold to improve the recovery. These products once grafted in the body may cause serious complications, resulting in their increased scrutiny for safety and efficacy. In many autologous chondrocyte implantation, there were common complications such as graft rejection, symptomatic hypertrophy, disturbed fusion and delamination.

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For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/rjx284/global_cartilage

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Global Cartilage Repair Market 2017-2021 - Gene Therapy and Stem Cell Therapy is the latest Market Trend Making ... - Business Wire (press release)

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Recreating breasts and beating hearts: how tissue engineering is changing medicine – The Dominion Post

August 30th, 2017 10:42 am

RACHEL THOMAS

Last updated19:30, August 30 2017

SUPPLIED

Tiny rat hearts growing in dishes in a move that Australian plastic surgeon Wayne Morrison hopes will one day be able to help humans.

"We're growing little beating hearts in dishes," Professor Wayne Morrison says, deadpan.

The man behind Australia's first hand transplanthas spent his life reattaching and transplanting body parts. Now he's working to see if we can regrow them ourselves.

As part of his work as director of Melbourne's BernardO'Brien Instituteof Microbiology, Morrison hasgrown hearts to maturity on the legs of rats and retransplanted them inside their bodies.

RACHEL THOMAS/STUFF

Morrison with leading Kiwi plastic surgeon Swee Tan at the Gillies McIndoe Research Institute in Wellington.

The next step is humans:"Our core interestis in trying to grow fat tissue and skin to repair people."

READ MORE:*Christchurch research key to printing human body parts*Scientists convert spinach leaves into human hearttissue that beats*Grant for NZ scientist seeking ways to use fish eyes to repair human corneas

With this in mind, he has been in Wellington to talk tissue engineering with leading plastic surgeon SweeTan, founder of the Gillies McIndoe Research Institute (GMRI) in Newtown, as well as to give a public lecture on his work.

RACHEL THOMAS/STUFF

The cell and tissue culture lab at the Gillies McIndoe Research institute, where Tan is engineering tissue.

We're "miles away" from growing a fully functional heart for humans, Morrison said, but the work could have a massive impactfor burns victims, mastectomy patients, and those waiting for vital organs such as lungs and hearts in the future.

"First, you want to be able to grow tissue that will not be rejected."

It all comes down tofiguring out how the building blocks of the body stem cells lead to growth of new tissue.

REUTERS

A rat with a human ear growing on its back, reportedly pictured by a Shanghai university in the 1990s. Morrison hopes a similar process can be used to grow vital organs for human transplants in the future.

New developments mean expertscan take a piece of skin and recreate the embryo which means it can be manipulated and growninto any type of tissue, he said.

Tanhas pioneered research at GMRIon targeting specific cancer stem cellswhich if manipulated properly would mean doctors could nip certain types of cancer in the bud.

InMelbourne, Morrison recentlytrialleda way ofregrowingbreastsin four mastectomy patients.

About 30mlof fatty tissue was inserted under the skin in a 200ml special chamber,and in one patient, that chamber filled completely with new tissue.

The key is to understand how that happened, and why it didn't work in the three other patients. "It is a principle, that you can grow or expand tissue."

A long-time plastic surgeon, Morrison has always been in the business of putting people back together.

He cited a "face amputation" about 20 years ago as the most complex and rewardingprocedures he's ever done.

An Australian womangot her ponytail caught in a milking machine near Melbourne. She was scalped from the back of her head down to her jawline.

"This one, extraordinarily, took the whole face off. I think there's only one other ever been reported in the world.

"Reattachingthat took 24 hours or so, and we didn't know if it would surviveor not. Fortunately the face did;a lot of the scalp tissue did not."

It's those horrifying cases thatled to both him and Tan seekingmore solutions for victims of cancer or freak accidents.

"Thecomplications of the drugs you have to take are morbid, and they will eventually kill you."

Frenchwoman IsabelleDinoirewas theworld's first recipient of afacialtransplant in 2005, butdied last year after developing two kinds ofof cancer.

But as Morrison says: "If you see someone with facial injuries or burns, you'd need a hard heart to say, 'No, you can't have a transplant' that would be horrendous."

-Stuff

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Recreating breasts and beating hearts: how tissue engineering is changing medicine - The Dominion Post

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State’s Stem Cell Agency Awards $18.2 Million Grant for B Cell Cancer Clinical Trial – UC San Diego Health

August 30th, 2017 10:42 am

The Independent Citizens Oversight Committee of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) today unanimously approved an $18.29 million grant to University of California San Diego School of Medicine researchers to fund a phase Ib/IIa clinical trial of a novel combination drug therapy for B-cell cancers.

Scanning electron micrograph of B lymphocyte. Image courtesy of National Cancer Institute.

The approach combines an experimental monoclonal antibody-based drug called cirmtuzumab with ibrutinib, a small molecule drug that inhibits a protein called Brutons tyrosine kinase. Ibrutinib, marketed as Imbruvica, is already approved to treat B cell cancers, like chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL). Cirmtuzumab targets ROR1, a cell surface protein present on tumors but not in normal adult tissues a distinction that makes it an attractive target for anticancer therapy. Cirmtuzumab is currently in clinical trials for the treatment of CLL.

The new combined drug trial, intended to study both safety and efficacy, is headed by Thomas Kipps, MD, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Medicine and deputy director of research at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center, in collaboration with colleagues at the UC San Diego CIRM Alpha Stem Cell Clinic the cell therapy arm of the Sanford Stem Cell Clinical Center at UC San Diego Health.

We are very excited about evaluating this combination of targeted therapies in the clinic, said Kipps. Although ibrutinib has been approved for treatment of patients with CLL or MCL, it is exceptionally rare for this drug by itself to get rid of all the leukemia cells or cause long-lasting remissions without continuous therapy.

As a result, patients are recommended to take ibrutinib indefinitely until they develop intolerance or resistance to this drug. By blocking a survival/growth-stimulating pathway that provides a lifeline to the leukemia cells of patients taking ibrutinib, cirmtuzumab can work together with ibrutinib to potentially kill all the leukemia cells, allowing patients to achieve a complete remission and stop therapy altogether.

Kipps noted, too that cirmtuzumab targets cancer stem cells, which behave somewhat like the roots of the disease, resisting many forms of treatment and allowing a malignancy to grow back after apparently successful therapy. By targeting cancer stem cells, said Kipps, cirmtuzumab may improve our capacity to achieve more complete and longer lasting remissions when used in combination with targeted drugs, such as ibrutinib, or other anti-cancer drugs for the treatment of patients with many different types of cancer.

B cell malignancies are cancers of the blood. B cells are a type of white blood cell or lymphocyte, part of the immune system. Some B cells produce antibodies to immediately help fight off infections while others, called memory B cells, remember the pathogen in case of future infections. In B cell cancers, mutated B cells dysfunction or grow in an uncontrolled manner, resulting in diseases like CLL (the most common type of leukemia) and most non-Hodgkins lymphomas.

Cirmtuzumab was developed in Kipps laboratory under the auspices of CIRMs HALT leukemia grant awarded to Dennis Carson, MD, principal investigator, and Catriona Jamieson, MD, PhD, deputy director of the Sanford Stem Cell Clinical Center and director of stem cell research at Moores Cancer Center. Kipps led one of the six projects, generating antibodies against ROR1 that, ultimately, led to the cirmtuzumab trials in patients with CLL.

Every year around 20,000 Americans are diagnosed with CLL, said Maria Millan, MD, interim president and CEO of CIRM. For those who have run out of treatment options, the only alternative is a bone marrow transplant. Since CLL afflicts individuals in their 70's who often have additional medical problems, bone marrow transplantation carries a higher risk of life-threatening complications. The combination approach of cirmtuzumab and Ibrutinib seeks to offer a less invasive and more effective alternative for these patients.

Cirmtuzumab has also shown efficacy against solid tumors. A clinical trial is planned to test it, in combination with the drug paclitaxel, for treating metastatic breast cancer. That trial is not yet recruiting participants. Cirmtuzumabs name is a nod to CIRMs long-standing support and research funding.

CIRM was created in 2004 by California voters with $3 billion in funding support to accelerate stem cell research and treatments. Since 2004, UC San Diego researchers have received at least 96 CIRM awards, totaling more than $182 million.

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State's Stem Cell Agency Awards $18.2 Million Grant for B Cell Cancer Clinical Trial - UC San Diego Health

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Purdue Visionaries Build Device to Prevent Blindness – Inside INdiana Business

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

An Indianapolis-based startup believes its device could be groundbreaking in the world of ophthalmologyand life-changing for patients with glaucoma. The disease is the second-leading cause of blindness, but Purdue-affiliated startup Bionode says its noninvasive technologyenveloped in off-the-shelf contact lenses and glassesreverses the physical cause of glaucoma. Driven by the vision of researchers at Purdue, the technology could be on the market in a matter of months.

Glaucoma is caused by fluid buildup in the front part of the eye; the extra fluid increases the pressure in the eye, damaging the optic nerve and ultimately causing blindness. Bionodes technology involves adding a gold trace to an off-the-shelf contact lens, which then works hand-in-hand with specially-equipped glasses.

The glasses generate a magnetic field, the contact picks it up, turns it into a current and drives the current into the structures of the eye, says Bionode Chief Technology Officer Dr. Pedro Irazoqui, who is also an electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering professor at Purdue.

By electrically stimulating the muscles around the canal where fluid leaves the eye, pressure on the optic nerve is relieved, preventing vision loss. Irazoqui likens the fluid-filled interior chamber of the eye to a clogged sink, and says Bionode does some expert plumbing.

Think of it as a sink filled with water, and the drain is closed. You open it up so the water can now flow around that clog, says Irazoqui. If you look at the pressure in the eye, its actually going down a lot faster than we would expect just from that opening of the drain.

Even more important than relieving the clog, says Irazoqui, is that Bionodes technology also turns down the faucet while opening the draina double whammy that relieves pressure in the eye.

Its interesting to think that using these electrical currents, we can actually get much more specific control down to whether we [manipulate] the drain, the faucet or both, says Irazoqui, and to what extent we [manipulate] themand we can really dial it in.

Because most glaucoma patients are over 40, when the eyes naturally produce less tearsand contacts exacerbate dry eyesBionode has improved the technology in recent months to produce the same effect with glasses only.

The new design works as well as the old design, but it has no contact lens, says Irazoqui. We can still use the contact lens to give the patient an even bigger kick, but I think most patients wont need the contact lens. And now, we have a deeper understanding of how it all works.

Bionode believes the result is a therapy thats far superior to existing glaucoma treatments; medicated eye drops eventually stop working and have low patient compliance, laser eye surgery can only be performed a limited number of times, and a blood procedure that allows liquid to leak out of an open wound in the eye carries a high risk of infection.

Bionode says the device relieves eye pressure in a matter of minutes, but an upcoming clinical trial will answer a looming question: how long will the effect last? In the coming weeks, Bionode will begin a human clinical trial involving 30 patients in Canada to evaluate how long the therapy is effective and generate data that could eliminate the need for additional trials in the U.S.

[The FDA] is going to ask some very specific questions, so we will structure this study [in Canada] in such a way that it answers the questions the FDA is going to ask, says Irazoqui. Were partnering with the right people who have the experience in putting together these clinical trials in ophthalmology for devices that have been approved by the FDA.

Irazoqui says commercializing the device by late summer 2018 is optimistic, but not crazy. Bionodes funding includes $100,000 from the Elevate Purdue Foundry Fund and $1 million from an anonymous investor.

The goal is to build medical devices that are clinically relevantthats what gets me out of bed in the morning. I want a device that we invented at Purdue to make it all the way to the clinic and change peoples lives, says Irazoqui. [Glaucoma] is the second leading cause of blindness, so the impact is huge. Thats a lot to be excited about.

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Out of sight: Area woman doesn’t let blindness darken her spirit – pharostribune.com

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

What Barrita Sue "Susie" Holverson lacks in sight, she makes up for in admiration from those who know her.

Holverson has been blind almost her whole life. That's also about the amount of time she's been attending Anoka United Methodist Church, where she serves as pianist. Parishioners there praise Holverson for her musical talent, sharp memory and wit, pleasant personality and positive attitude in the face of her inability to see.

In her Kokomo home, with her cane leaning against a wall and her piano standing in the living room, Holverson recalled having to be given oxygen after being born premature. Getting too much oxygen is likely what led to her blindness, she said.

"But that was what kept me alive," she added.

She went on to remember how it wasn't uncommon for people to sue hospitals for such sight-robbing treatments, but said her own experience doesn't leave her bitter.

"I thought, well, you know what? There could've been worse things," she said. "I have a relatively good mind."

"I'm no genius," she added with a laugh. "Compared to what could've been, I'm fine."

Holverson said she could see early on in life, but not really well. Before reaching age 3, her vision was reduced to just being able to sense light and dark before that ability went away too, she continued.

"I've just grown up with it, so to me it was no big deal," she said.

Holverson said she attended the Indiana School for the Blind in Indianapolis, where she learned how to read Braille and Braille music and took piano and voice lessons.

She said she went on to work in medical transcription for St. Vincent Hospital in Kokomo for about 20 years.

"I cook, I clean, I do just about the same things that everybody else does," she said. "The only thing I guess I don't do, and everybody should thank God that I don't, I don't drive," she added with a laugh.

Her music lessons started before she went off to school, she said, and she currently plays the piano for services at Anoka United Methodist Church.

"It's my way of serving," she said.

Holverson said her mother, who was an avid pianist too, got her interested in music. She recalled how they used to play together at Anoka United Methodist Church, which she grew up down the street from. Her grandmother helped start the church in 1913, Holverson said.

"It's just always been a part of my life, the church," she said. "There are friends and family there and I don't know how else to put it. It's a special place to be."

With the help of the speech software on her computer, Holverson said she does a lot of emailing for the church's prayer chain. She said she also likes to listen to audio books and relies on Siri, the voiced personal assistant developed by Apple Inc., to use her iPhone.

"Sometimes I'd like to smack her," she admitted with a laugh.

Ruth Mayhill, organist for Anoka United Methodist Church, has known Holverson since she was born. She, like several others at the church, is in awe of Holverson's ability to recall hymns by their numbers across multiple hymnals.

Mayhill said she's also fond of Holverson's ability to play the piano.

"She can sit down and play a song and it just blows us away," she said. "She is amazing."

Holverson's friendly personality is another one of her qualities, Mayhill said.

"She is fun to be around," Mayhill said. "They torment and tease her and she takes it and dishes it right back."

Mayhill said she also admires Holverson's ability to live alone and take care of herself despite not being able to see.

"It's amazing," Mayhill said. "I know they are taught that in the blind school, all the blind people are taught how to take care of themselves, but to witness it, she has been eye-opening for all of us around here."

Joyce Propes, who sings in the church's choir, said one of her favorite stories about Holverson is when she was picked up one summer to perform at the church's vacation Bible school. A song was played in the car and Holverson was asked about playing it at vacation Bible school, Propes continued.

"And Susie would listen to it on the way from Kokomo and be able to play it for the kids when she got here," Propes said. "Just that fast she can pick up and play."

Holverson reacts to the praise with humility.

"I just do what I can and to me I don't do anymore than anybody else, the only difference is that I can't look at what I'm doing," she said.

She said her faith, family and friends are the source of her positive attitude.

"I guess I don't see myself the way other people see me," she said. "I'm just plain me and that's all I really am."

Reach Mitchell Kirk at mitchell.kirk@pharostribune.com or 574-732-5130

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Cure Yourself of Tree Blindness – New York Times

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

Tree death, like tree sex, can reveal deeper truths. You may have seen bare trunks with branches that fork over and over in perfect symmetry (that opposite branching again). These are ash trees, victims of the deadly emerald ash borer, which is thought to have arrived in shipping pallets from Asia. Beyond the aesthetic and ecological loss, and just plain tragedy, the ash carnage costs society a huge amount of money, as parks departments and homeowners must either treat ash trees or have them cut down.

The borer is a consequence of global trade, and its only the latest iteration of this sad story; chestnuts, hemlocks and elms have already taken major hits from foreign pests.

Luckily, not everything in tree world is so dismal. The trees around us can uncover forgotten history. Sometimes a huge oak rises in a yard or in the midst of a much younger woods. These witness trees once marked the edges of farm fields. An oddly straight line of junipers or locusts likely signals an old fence row. Neighborhoods built in the 1960s might be lined with once-loved, now-hated Bradford pears; older ones may feature towering willow oaks with roots bulging out of undersized tree boxes. Parts of Paris, New York and, appropriately, London, are practically monocultures of London plane trees, once favored because they could survive these cities fetid air.

Trees can also tell us how well were managing our environment today. Many eastern forests, including Rock Creek Park, the wild green vein running down Washingtons center, have an understory dominated by American beech. Beeches are slow to get going, but theyre almost unmatched at growing in shade and being unappetizing to deer, which are wildly overpopulated in much of the country. Unless we find a way to manage our woods, using predators and periodic fires, were probably on our way to species-poor forests dominated by beeches. As much as I love the trees smooth, elephant-skin bark and brittle leaves shivering on their branches through the winter, I dont think an all-beech future is one I want to see.

Some may want more practical reasons for learning trees. If so, I offer that knowing your trees opens up an abundant and entirely free food source. Those in the know can gorge on juicy native mulberries and serviceberries in the spring, and persimmons and pawpaws in late summer. Thats to say nothing of tree nuts, which carpet the forest floor in fall. Pecans, walnuts, hickory nuts, beech nuts; with proper preparation, theyre all edible. For Native Americans living in California before European contact, acorns were a staple more important than corn. Yet today theyre a specialty item, largely limited to the occasional D.I.Y. foraging workshop.

Were so used to eating domesticated plants that the idea of eating wild tree parts seems strange, primitive and possibly dangerous. As a result, were letting billions of dollars worth of free, high-quality food go to waste. This, reader, is madness! Ill admit, however, that Im among the mad. Roadside tree fruit is just an occasional supplement to my diet, and I havent yet found the patience to leach the bitter tannins out of acorns. For me, learning about trees is more about seeing, and knowing. Its about not being a stranger in my own country.

And its about not letting the built environment make me too tame. When you engage with a tree, you momentarily leave the human-created world. Look at an American elm in winter, its limbs waving like Medusas snaky hair. The elm may grow along streets and sidewalks, but there is nothing tame about that tree. In cities, where animals feast on human gardens or garbage and most landscape plants are domesticated cultivars, native trees are the last truly wild beings.

Yes, people may look curiously if you stop to study a tree. But so what? Let yourself go a little wild.

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Cure Yourself of Tree Blindness - New York Times

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Corrective lenses minimize color blindness – KING5.com

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

New wearable technology is changing the view for color blind patients.

Amity Addrisi and NBC News , KING 6:24 PM. PDT August 25, 2017

Tyler Gore has red/green color blindness, but with new glasses, hes able to see those colors properly for the first time in his life.

Wearable technology is changing everything for color-blind patients.

"I have red/green color blindness, and reds and greens look more brown and tan to me. It makes it hard to see," says Tyler Gore,.

He found out he was color blind from a test at the optometrist office in first grade. Now 16 years old, it affects the way he drives.

"Mostly when they're mixed together, like stop lights. I can't see stop light colors," said Gore.

Roughly 13 million people in the United States have this genetic condition.

"Because it doesn't prevent vision it just alters the way we perceive color in vision it's very difficult for anyone to understand the effect, said Dr. Raquel Strange, Gores optometrist.

But technology is changing that. Gore heard about Enchroma glasses that allows him to see color, such as red and green, for the first time.

"Everything was so beautiful. All of the colors popped out. All of the colors were exaggerated, and I could see color. It was awesome," said Gore.

"We've had people break down and cry. We've seen lots of parents cry and girlfriends and wives cry because they had no idea the difference that it makes. It allows them to perceive those differences. That's what they're missing. It's this kind of one-ness to so many of those colors, said Strange.

So, for his birthday, Gore is getting his own pair. It's the only thing he asked for, so he can experience a brighter version of the world he knows.

There are several different versions of glasses to help correct color blindness. The Enchroma brand costs from $250 to $300 and can be made with corrective prescription lenses for indoors or out.

2017 NBCNEWS.COM

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Scientists aim to ease blindness with video goggles – Futurity: Research News

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

Scientists are still a long way from creating a visual prosthesis that works as well as a real human eye. But, engineers are making steady progress in what was once the realm of science fiction.

One of their promising new devices, a bionic vision system based on photovoltaic implants, is awaiting approval for human clinical trials in Europe. A second system, based on in vitro studies of the retina, could be ready for animal testing within four or five years. Both inventions have the same goal: to give back some measure of sight to people with progressive diseases of the retinaespecially retinitis pigmentosa and macular degeneration.

The new device doesnt require the implantation of a bulky electronics case and antenna, or a cable coming out of the eye.

According to the National Institutes of Health, retinitis pigmentosa is the leading cause of inherited blindness, affecting 1 in about 4,000 people in the United States. The disease usually begins with a loss of night vision in childhood, and progresses to involve peripheral and then central vision, gradually robbing young people of the ability to read, drive, recognize faces, and do routine daily tasks.

Macular degeneration, in contrast, is one of the leading causes of vision loss in Americans 60 and older. By 2020, the NIH estimates that as many as 3 million people in the United States may be living with various stages of the disease, which gradually destroys the densely packed light-sensitive cells, called photoreceptors, in the retinas center, or macula.

Many of these folks are going to be losing their central vision, says Chip Goehring, president of the American Macular Degeneration Foundation, so it is absolutely vital that we have options for the restoration of sight, including biological and mechanical approachesstem cell therapies for photoreceptor replacement, gene therapies to restore dysfunctional retinal tissues, and prosthetic retinas that can serve an even wider population of people with vision loss.

Normal retinal tissue consists of photoreceptors: light-sensitive cells resembling rods and cones at the base of the eye, topped by interconnected layers of neurons. The signal travels from the rods and cones, through bipolar cells to ganglion cells, then via the optic nerve to several brain areas, including the visual cortex. Scientists still arent exactly sure why the rods and cones break down in patients with retinal diseases, nor have they figured out ways to prevent, slow, or reverse the process.

There is one silver lining: Retinitis pigmentosa and macular degeneration tend to spare some of the bipolar and ganglion cells. This means that the neurons in these patients retinas can be stimulated artificially, with micro-electrodes, bypassing the damaged rods and cones altogether.

Daniel Palanker, a professor of ophthalmology at Stanford University, has developed and patented numerous devices over the years to diagnose and treat eye diseases. Among them are a neurostimulator for enhancement of tear secretion in patients with dry eye syndrome, a femtosecond laser for cataract surgery, and a patterned laser scanning photocoagulator that surgeons use to treat multiple retinal disorders, including diabetic retinopathy, without excessive damage to the delicate tissues around the treatment spots.

Palankers new prosthetic device, called PRIMA, features a tiny video camera mounted atop futuristic-looking augmented reality goggles, connected to a video processor about the size of a cell phone. It doesnt require the implantation of a bulky electronics case and antenna, or a cable coming out of the eye, like a German system that has been used successfully by a handful of patients in Europe.

Instead it relies on multiple arrays of photodiodes, each about a millimeter in diameter and containing hundreds of pixels, which work like the solar panels on a rooftop. Surgeons can lay down these tiny chips, like tiles, replacing the missing light-sensitive rods and cones in the central retina.

When PRIMAs camera captures an image of, say, a flower, the video processor transmits that picture to a microdisplay mounted inside the goggles. Powerful pulses of near-infrared light illuminate this display and are projected from the goggles into the eye, like the invisible rays of a TV remote control.

The implanted photodiodes pick up these signals and convert them into tiny pulses of electrical current, which stimulate the bipolar cells directly above them. The signals propagate to the ganglion cells and then to the brain, which perceives them as patterns of light: a flower!

To test the system, researchers implanted PRIMA chips in laboratory rodents and exposed them to flashes of light, or to flickering patterns on a computer screen. By recording the resulting electrical activity in the animals visual cortices, the scientists measured their visual acuity.

It turned out that the prosthetic acuity exactly matched the 70-micron resolution of the implant, which is half the acuity of the rats natural vision, Palanker says. Since the stimulation thresholds were much lower than the safety limits, we decided to develop even smaller pixels to enable better vision. More recent behavioral tests, conducted by the French collaborators in primates, have confirmed our results with rodents.

Of course, until the implants are done in human patients, we wont know for sure.

But when human clinical trials do start later this year in Europe, they hope to achieve resolution corresponding to 20/250 vision with 70-micron pixels. That still is worse than the standard for legal blindness, 20/200, but it may be enough for a user to read very large print, or to see the face of a newborn grandchild.

In the next generation of the device, Palanker says, We should be able to put more than 12,000 pixels within 15 degrees of the visual field, taking the system to 20/150 or even better.

And while PRIMA cant reproduce color vision yetonly various shades of grayWe are working on single-cell selectivity in retinal stimulation, which might enable color perception, he says. With more experience, surgeons also might be able to expand the visual field to about 20 degrees.

Scientists ultimate dream is to build a visual prosthesis so small and powerful that it can stimulate specific neurons inside the retina, rather than sundry patches of them. Thats the goal of E.J. Chichilnisky, a Stanford professor of neurosurgery and of ophthalmology.

Think of the retina as an orchestra, Chichilnisky says. When you try to make music, you need the violins to play one score, the oboes to play a different score, and so on. Likewise, the retinas 1 million or so ganglion cells are composed of about 20 distinct types. Each plays a slightly different role in transmitting the perception of shape, color, depth, motion, and other visual features to the brain.

Since the mid-1990s, Chichilnisky has worked with a variety of physicists and engineers to develop small but powerful electrode arrays capable of measuring neural activity at the cellular level.

To better understand the patterns of electrical activity in the retina, Chichilnisky and colleagues use eye tissue taken from primates that have been euthanized for other medical studies. By placing small pieces of retinal tissue atop the microchip arrays, then exposing those samples to various patterns of light, theyve been able to record and study the distinctive electrical responses of five different types of retinal ganglion cells, which together account for 75 percent of the visual signal sent to the brain.

Theyve also developed techniques to replicate those electrical patterns, artificially stimulating the ganglion cells with high precision, comparable to the natural signals elicited by the rods and cones.

By learning how to replicate these complex signals, researchers are one step closer to their ultimate goal: a high-acuity visual prosthesis that behaves like an orchestra conductor, signaling the retinas myriad neurons to fire in precisely the right ways, at precisely the right times. Im not saying weve got it nailed, he says, but we certainly now have proof of concept for how to make a better device in the future.

The next challenge will be to fit the computing power onto an implantable electrode array that can do its job safely inside the eye, without overheating surrounding tissues, and autonomously, without any graduate students or postdocs running it, he says, laughing. If all goes well, a prototype of the implant could be ready for testing in lab animals in four to five years.

Chichilnisky and Palanker have the sense that they are pushing scientific boundariesand that their work someday may help more than blind people. Electro-neural interfaces already are being used to assist in the control of several vital organs, including the heart, bladder, and limbs. Before long, they even may be hooked up to different parts of the brain, helping people with memory loss, for example or, incredible as it sounds, even enabling telepathic communication.

We live in an era when we are starting to overcome the limitations imposed on us by our biological nature, Palanker says. This is how evolution goes.

Source:Theresa Johnston for Stanford University

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The Genetic Theory of Aging – Concepts and Evidence

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

Your DNA may predict more about you than the way you look. According to the genetic theory of aging, your genes (as well as mutations in those genes) are responsible for how long you'll live. Here's what you should know about genes and longevity, and where genetics fits in among the various theories of aging.

The genetic theory of aging states that lifespan is largely determined by the genes we inherit.

According to the theory, our longevity is primarily determined at the moment of conception, and is largely reliant on our parents and their genes.

The basis behind this theory is that segments of DNA that occur at the end of chromosomes, called telomeres, determine the maximum lifespan of a cell. Telomeres are pieces of "junk" DNA at the end of chromosomes which become shorter every time a cell divides. These telomeres become shorter and shorter and eventually the cells cannot divide without losing important pieces of DNA.

Before delving into the tenets of how genetics affects aging, and the arguments for and against this theory, it's helpful to briefly discuss the primary categories of aging theories and some of the specific theories in these categories. At the current time there is not one theory or even one category of theories which can explain everything we observe in the aging process.

There are two primary categories of aging theories which differ fundamentally in what can be referred to as the "purpose" of aging. In the first category, aging is essentially an accident; an accumulation of damage and wear and tear to the body which eventually leads to death. In contrast, programmed aging theories view aging as an intentional process, controlled in a way that can be likened to other phases of life such as puberty.

Error theories include several separate theories including:

Programmed theories of aging are also broken down into different categories based on the method in which our body's are programmed to age and die.

There is significant overlap between these theories and even categories of aging theories.

Before discussing the key concepts related to aging and genetics, let's review what our DNA is and some of the basic ways in which genes affect our lifespan.

Our genes are contained in our DNA which is present in the nucleus (inner area) of each cell in our bodies. (There is also mitochondrial DNA present in the organelles called mitochondria which are present in the cytoplasm of the cell.) We each have 46 chromosomes making up our DNA, 23 of which come from our mothers and 23 which come from our fathers. Of these, 44 are autosomes, and two are the sex chromosomes, which determine if we are to be male or female.

(Mitochondrial DNA, in contrast, carries much less genetic information and is received from only our mothers.)

Within these chromosomes lie our genes, our genetic bluepirint responsible for carrying the information for every process which will take place in our cells. Our genes can be envisioned as a series of letters which make up words and sentences of instructions. These words and sentences code for the manufacturing of proteins which control every cellular process.

If any of these genes are damaged, for example, by a mutation which alters the series of "letters and words" in the instructions, an abnormal protein may be manufactured, which in turn, performs a defective function.

If a mutation occurs in proteins which regulate the growth of a cell, cancer may result. If these genes are mutated from birth, various hereditary syndromes may occur. For example, cystic fibrosis is a condition in which a child inherits two mutated genes controlling a protein which regulates channels responsible for the movement of chloride across cells in the sweat glands, digestive glands, and more. The result of this single mutation results in a thickening of mucus produced by these glands, and the resultant problems which are associated with this condition.

It doesn't take an elaborate study to determine that our genes play at least some role in longevity. People whose parents and ancestors have lived longer, tend to live longer and vice versa. At the same time, we know that genetics alone are not the sole cause of aging. Studies looking at identical twins reveal that there is clearly something else going on; identical twins who have identical genes do not always live an identical number of years.

Some genes are beneficial and enhance longevity. For example, the gene that helps a person metabolize cholesterolwould reduce a person's risk of heart disease.

Some gene mutations are inherited, and may shorten lifespan. However, mutations also can happen after birth, since exposure to toxins, free radicals and radiation can cause gene changes. (Gene mutations acquired after birth are referred to as acquired or somatic gene mutations.) Most mutations are not bad for you, and some can even be beneficial. That's because genetic mutations create genetic diversity, which keeps populations healthy. Other mutations, called silent mutations, have no effect on the body at all.

Some genes, when mutated are harmful, like those that increase the risk of cancer. Many people are familiar with the BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations which predispose to breast cancer. These genes are referred to as tumor suppressor genes which code for proteins that control the repair of damaged DNA (or the elimination of the cell with damaged DNA if repair is not possible.)

Various disease and conditions related to heritable gene mutations can directly impact lifespan. These include cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, Tay-Sachs disease and Huntington's disease, to name a few.

The key concepts in genetics and aging include several important concepts and ideas ranging from telomere shortening to theories about the role of stem cells in aging.

Telomeres - At the end of each of our chromosomes lies a piece of "junk" DNA called telomeres. Telomeres do not code for any proteins but appear to have a protective function, keeping the ends of DNA from attaching to other pieces of DNA or forming a circle. Each time a cell divides a little more of a telemore is snipped off. Eventually. there is none of this junk DNA left, and further snipping can damage the chromosomes and genes so that the cell dies.

In general, the average cell is able to divide 50 times before the telomere is used up (the Hayflick limit). Cancer cells have figured out a way to not remove, and sometimes even add to, a section of the telomere. In addition, some cells such as white blood cells do not undergo this process of telomere shortening. It appears that while genes in all of our cells have the code word for the enzyme telomerase which inhibits telomere shortening and possibly even results in lengthening, the gene is only "turned on" or "expressed" as geneticists say, in cells such as white blood cells and cancer cells. Scientists have theorized that if this telomerase could somehow be turned on in other cells (but not so much that their growth would go haywire as in cancer cells) our age limit could be expanded.

Studies have found that some chronic conditions such as high blood pressure are associated with less telomerase activity whereas a healthy diet and exercise are linked with longer telomeres. Being overweight is also associated with shorter telomeres.

Longevity genes - Longevity genes are specific genes which are associated with living longer. Two genes that are directly associated with longevity are SIRT1 (sirtruin 1) and SIRT2. Scientists looking at a group of over 800 people age 100 or older, found three significant differences in genes associated with aging.

Cell senescence - Cell senescence refers to the process by which cells decay over time. This can be related to shortening of the telomeres, or the process of apoptosis (or cell suicide) in which old or damaged cells are removed.

Stem cells - Pluripotent stem cells are immature cells which have the potential to become any type of cell in the body. It is theorized that aging may be related to either the depletion of stem cells or the loss of the ability of stem cells to differentiate or mature into different kinds of cells. It's important to note that this theory refers to adult stem cells, not embryonic stem cells. Unlike embryonic stem cells, adult stem cells cannot mature into any type of cell but rather only a certain number of cell types. Most cells in our bodies are differentiated, or fully mature, and stem cells are only a small number of the cells present in the body.

An example of a tissue type in which regeneration is possible by this method is the liver. This is in contrast to brain tissue which usually lacks this regenerative potential. There is now evidence that stem cells themselves may be affected in the aging process, but these theories are similar to the chicken-and-the-egg issue. It's not certain of aging occurs due to changes in stem cells, or, if instead, changes in stem cells are due to the process of aging.

Epigenetics - Epigenetics refers to the expression of genes. In other words, a gene may be present, but can either be turned on or turned off. We know that there are some genes in the body that are turned on for only a certain period of time. The field of epigenetics is also helping scientists understand how environmental factors may work within the constraints of genetics to either protect or predispose to disease.

As noted above, there is a significant amount of evidence that looks at the importance of genes in expected survival. When looking at genetic theories, these are broken down into three primary schools of thought.

There are several avenues of evidence that support a genetic theory of aging, at least in part.

Perhaps the strongest evidence in support of the genetic theory are the considerable species-specific differences in maximal survival, with some species (such as butterflies) having very short lifespans, and others, such as elephants and whales, being similar to ours. Within a single species, survival is similar, but survival can be very different between two species that are otherwise similar in size..

Twins studies also support a genetic component, as identical twins (monozygotic twins) are much more similar in terms of life expectancy than are non-identical or dizygotic twins. Evaluating identical twins who have been raised together and contrasting this with identical twins who are raised apart can help to separate out behavior factors such as diet and other lifestyle habits as a cause of family trends in longevity.

Further evidence on a broad scale has been found by looking at the effect of genetic mutations in other animals. In some worms as well as some mice, a single gene mutation may lengthen survival by over 50 percent.

In addition, we are finding evidence for some of the specific mechanisms involved in the genetic theory. Direct measurements of telomere length has shown that telomeres are vulnerable to genetic factors that can speed up the rate of aging.

One of the stronger arguments against a genetic theory of aging or a "programmed lifespan" comes from an evolutionary perspective. Why would there by a specified lifespan beyond reproduction? In other words, what "purpose" is there for life after a person has reproduced and been alive long enough to raise their progeny to adulthood?

It's also clear from what we know about lifestyle and disease that there are many other factors in aging. Identical twins may have very different lifespans depending on their exposures, their lifestyle factors (such as smoking) and physical activity patterns.

Its been estimated that genes can explain a maximum of 35 percent of lifespan, but there is still more we do not understand about aging than which we do understand. Overall, it's likely that aging is a multifactorial process, meaning that it is probably a combination of several of the theories. It's also important to note that the theories discussed here are not mutually exclusive. The concept of epigenetics, or whether or not a gene that is present is "expressed" can further muddy our understanding.

In addition to genetics, there are other determinants in aging such as our behaviors, exposures, and just plain luck. You are not doomed if your family members tend to die young, and you can't ignore your health even if your family members tend to live long.

We are taught to eat a healthy diet and be active and these lifestyle factors are likely just as important no matter how much our genetics are involved in aging. The same practices which seem to keep the organs and tissues of our body's healthy may also keep our genes and chromosomes healthy.

Regardless of the particular causes of aging, it can make a difference to:

Sources:

Jin, K. Modern Biological Theories of Aging. Aging and Disease. 2010. 1(2):72-74.

Kasper, Dennis, Anthony Fauci, Stephen Hauser, Dan Longo, and J. Jameson. Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine. New York: McGraw-Hill Education, 2015. Print.

Kumar, Vinay, Abul K. Abbas, Jon C. Aster, and James A. Perkins. Robbins and Cotran Pathologic Basis of Disease. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier/Saunders, 2015. Print.

Leung, C., Laraia, B., Needham, B. et al. Soda and Cell Aging: Associations Between Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption and Leukocyte Telomere Length in Healthy Adults From the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys. American Journal of Public Health. 2014. 104(12):2425-31.

Smith, J., and R. Daniel. Stem Cells and Aging: A Chicken-Or-The-Egg Issue?. Aging and Disease. 2012. 3(3):260-267.

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The Genetic Theory of Aging - Concepts and Evidence

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The 5 Aging Startups Backed by Longevity Fund – Nanalyze

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

Nothing is certain except death and taxes, said Benjamin Franklin, andhis words still hold true today. While there are ways to mitigate the effects of taxes like Foreign Earned Income Exclusion, death is coming and our days are numbered. It seems like quite the taboo topic that nobody wants to talk about. One nurse who did an informal survey found that the number one regret from people on their deathbeds was I wish I lived my life the way I wanted to and not the way other people wanted me to live it. If thats not an option for you, thenmaybe you need more time on this earth to sort yourself out. Quite a few startups are addressing theholy grail of cracking aging, an idea which supersedes every other startup idea out there. While extending the lifespan of humans may not be the best idea for this planet, quite a few people would happily slap down some cash for some extra years on this planet so they can live as long as some of the Asians do:

Source Population.sg (data as of 2014)

Weve looked at various aging startups before like Human Longevity, and Calico. When it comes to the ideal leadership profile for a company thats focused on aging, were split between having an old experienced executive who is increasingly aware of theirown morality versus a younger millennial filled with the endless optimism and naive ambition that typically characterizes youth of all generations. One good example of someone in the latter categorytackling theproblem of aging is Laura Deming. While all the news outlets are (appropriately) fawning all overthe profile of Ms. Deming, an MIT dropout who started working on the fund before she was old enough to smoke cigarettes, were more interested in where she has placed her bets so far. According to Longevity Funds website, theyve made investments in 5 startups so far. We didnt see anyone talking about what investments she has made, so were going to sort that out right now.

Unity Biotechnology first came across our radar earlier this year in an article we wrote about life extension science (a label thats much preferred over anti-aging). Since this San Francisco startup was founded in 2009, theyve taken in $154 million in funding with the latest round, a $35 million Series B, closing just 10 days ago (actually a continuation of a $116 Series B that started in Fall of 2016). According to Unity, that $151 million Series B is said to be one of the largest private financing rounds in biotech history. Loads of highprofile investors haveprovided all this funding including Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Peter Thiel of Founders Fund, Mayo Clinic, and Fidelity just to name some.

Healthy cells that age can experience a stress known as cellular senescence. Unity published research in April of this year showing that they can selectively eliminate senescent cells with a molecule (UBX0101) that may delay, prevent, or even reverse osteoarthritis (OA) which causes chronic joint pain in 80% of people over 65.

Precision Biosciences first came across our radar in an article we publisheda few years back on7 Gene Editing Companies Investors Should Watch. Since that article, 3 of those companies have gone publicand Precision Biosciences has taken in $25.65 million in total funding, all of which came in the form of a Series A which saw participation from Amgen (NASDAQ:AMGN) and Baxter (NYSE:BAX). Their platform revolves around ARCUS, a next-generation genome editing platform derived from a natural genome editing enzyme called a homing endonuclease. Heres how this technology can be used:

Genetics certainly comes into play when we think about life expectancy so its easy to see how this company fits the anti aging investment thesis.

Founded in 2015, San Francisco startup Alexo Therapeutics has taken in $61 million in funding so far to develop ALX148, a fusion protein that is supposed to improve the effectiveness of antibody therapies that are used to fight cancer. Since cancer is a leading cause of death, that may be why this company falls into an anti aging portfolio. Of course the same could be said for just about any healthcare company. The ALX148 protein is based off of research conducted at Stanford University which also happens to be an investor in this startup. On April of this year, they initiated dosing in a Phase 1 clinical program that is evaluating the safety of ALX148 in patients with advanced solid tumors and lyphoma.

Founded in 2015 as well, San Diego startup Metacrine has taken in $36 million in funding so far from investors that includevenBio (also an investor in Alexo Therapeutics and Precision Biosciences). The companys focus is on advancing research in nuclear hormone receptors for the treatment of metabolic diseases like type 2 diabetes and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The technology is based on research conducted Salk Institute researcher Ron Evanswho has founded many companies in the past including co-founding Ligand Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:LGND). Its safe to say that if metabolic diseases cause you to die early, then curing them amounts to increasing your longevity. Just a few weeks ago, Metacrine announced a collaboration with Novo Nordisk(NYSE:NVO) to develop Fibroblast Growth Factor 1 (FGF1) variants for glucose lowering and insulin sensitization.

Founded in 2014,Massachusetts startup Navitor Pharmaceuticals has taken in $56.5 millionso far from investors that include Sanofi (NYSE:SNY) and Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ). The startup is working on a new class of medicines for age-related diseases, and an article by FierceBiotech does a good job of explaining what Navitor does for people with no medical background. Cells in your body get hungry like you do, and there is a protein kinase called mTOR that controls their appetites. When something goes wrong with this process, bad isht happens like metabolic, neurological, inflammatory diseases, and even neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimers disease. Thanks to some discoveries by Whitehead Institute researcher David Sabatini, Navitor can now target mTORC1 which plays the biggest role in cell growth.

Longevity Fund spent 6 months evaluating the merits of each investment, and all these aging startups picked so far have some commonalities. All have raised more than $25 millionand all are backed by high profile investors with venBio backing three of thesefive startups. While we need to wait and see what other investments are raised, its toughto see how any of these investments could have been made without connections (like Peter Thiel). Ms. Deming is the youngest fellow in the history of Peter Thiel Fellowships, and thats what triggered her to put her MIT education on hold. With 3-5 startupsleft for Longevity to invest in yet, it will be interesting to see what other aging startupsthey choose for their portfolio.

One firm that allows you to buy shares in startups before they IPO is Motif Investing. You can open a Motif Investing account for free with no deposit required so you are ready to buy shares of future IPOs before they begin trading.

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Do Low Calorie Diets Help You Live Longer? – Healthline

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

Cutting calories from the diets of many animals dramatically increases their life span, leading some people to try to extend their own lives in the same way.

If you could live to be 130 years old, what would you willingly give up?

How about 30 to 50 percent of the calories you eat for the rest of your life?

Proponents of the dietary practice known as calorie restriction (CR) happily make this trade-off every day in hopes of having life spans that leave todays centenarians in the dust.

This may sound like a fad diet, but theres quite a bit of research to back up the use of calorie restriction for longevity although most of it has been done in animals other than humans.

So how likely is it that eating child-size portions for every meal will gain you an extra few decades of life?

Studies have shown that calorie restriction can extend the life span and reduce age-related chronic diseases of many species, including mice, fish, worms, and yeast.

But these creatures are not people.

Which is why scientists turn to primates like rhesus monkeys, which age similarly to humans, as well as develop cancer, diabetes, and some traits of Alzheimers disease.

In a study published earlier this year in Nature Communications, researchers found that monkeys who ate a 30 percent calorie restricted diet lived longer than those on a regular diet.

Six of the 20 monkeys on a calorie restricted diet have lived beyond 40 years. The average lifespan for monkeys in captivity is around 26 years. One male is currently 43 years old, a record for the species.

Researchers also found that calorie restriction benefitted older monkeys, but not younger ones. This is in contrast to other studies in mice that showed that starting calorie restriction at a young age gives the best results.

The sex of the monkeys and what they ate not just the number of calories also affected how much monkeys benefitted from calories restriction.

While the results of animal studies are promising, scientists know less about how calorie restriction affects people, especially long-term.

Given that Americans live on average around 78 years, researchers would have to wait decades to see if calorie restriction extended human life span.

To compensate for this, Duke University researchers instead looked at measures of biological age.

In a study published earlier this year in The Journals of Gerontology: Series A, researchers divided volunteers into two groups a calorie restriction group and a regular diet group.

The calorie restriction group aimed to cut their caloric intake by 25 percent although by the end of the two-year study they had only achieved a 12 percent reduction.

After each one-year period, the biological age of people in the calorie restriction group increased by 0.11 years, compared with 0.71 years for people who stuck with their usual diets.

Researchers calculated biological age using chronological age and biomarkers for things such as cardiovascular and immune system function, total cholesterol, and hemoglobin levels.

However, researchers only followed people for two years. Whether these benefits continue after this point, and at what level, is unknown.

No one is certain why calorie restriction increases the life span of so many organisms.

Some scientists think it may have to do with free radicals atoms with an unpaired electron that are released when the body turns food into energy.

Free radicals can damage important parts of the cell, like DNA and the cells membrane. So cutting back on the food you eat may decrease the number of free radicals circulating in the body.

Insulin could also play a role. As we age, our bodies can become resistant to this hormone, leading to excess glucose in the blood that can damage organs, blood vessels, and nerves.

Some researchers, though, think calorie restriction increases longevity by rejuvenating the bodys biological clock.

This clock is actually a set of genes that change activity in order to sync with the cycle of day and night.

In a recent study published in the journal Cell, researchers found that the biological clock activated different genes in liver cells of older mice, compared with younger ones. As a result, cells in older mice processed energy inefficiently.

However, when researchers cut the calorie intake for older mice by 30 percent for six months, the energy processing in the cells resembled that of young mice.

A second research group, in another study published in Cell, saw a similar reboot of the biologic clock of stem cells in older mice fed a calorie-restricted diet.

If signing up for a lifetime of hunger to gain a few extra years of life doesnt sound appealing, you may have other options for breaking the 100-year mark or at least living healthier.

A team led by gerontologist Valter Longo, PhD, director of the University of Southern California Longevity Institute, tested the effects of a fasting-mimicking diet an alternative to only drinking water on the risk of developing major diseases.

The study was published earlier this year in Science Translational Medicine.

People on the fasting-mimicking diet ate about 750 to 1,100 calories per day, for five days per month, over three months.

Adult women usually eat 1,600 to 2,400 calories per day, and adult men generally eat 2,000 to 3,000 calories per day.

Food used in the study contained exact proportions of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates.

People on the fasting-mimicking diet saw a drop in their blood pressure, blood glucose, and markers of inflammation, compared with people eating a regular diet.

People who fasted also lost weight over the three months, but not muscle mass, which is a concern with a calorie-restricted diet.

As with other calorie restriction studies in people, this one doesnt show that cutting back on calories increases lifespan, only that it may reduce certain risk factors for disease.

The CR Society International, an organization that offers resources for people wanting to live longer by cutting out calories, lists some of the potential unwanted effects of long-term calorie restriction.

These include loss of bone mass, sensitivity to cold, and decreased sex drive.

Some experts are also concerned that calorie restriction could cross the line into an eating disorder, such as anorexia nervosa.

Dr. Ovidio Bermudez, chief clinical officer and medical director of child and adolescent services at the Eating Recovery Center, said if someone walked into his office saying that they were going to cut their caloric intake by 30 or 50 percent for the rest of their life, I would raise serious concerns about that.

You may be awakening a monster that you dont want to deal with, said Bermudez.

He emphasized, though, that not everyone who does calorie restriction will develop anorexia.

Like other eating disorders, anorexia has a strong genetic component that puts some people at risk more than others, although scientists dont fully understand the genetics.

However, genetics alone is not enough to trigger the disease.

The genetic predisposition [to eating disorders] is insufficient and needs to interact with some other influences, said Bermudez. It seems that, in this day and age, those other influences are, to a great extent, environmental.

There is no single environmental trigger for anorexia.

Some teenage girls or boys may take a health class in high school and decide to eat less and exercise more. Or a young adult may look around and try to conform with the fast-paced, thin-ideal culture that we live in, said Bermudez.

Or someone wanting to live longer may restrict their calories.

Not everyone in these situations will develop an eating disorder. But the danger is that someone who drastically cuts down on eating will cross a threshold leading to a neurobiological change that seems to both trigger and cement the illness process, said Bermudez.

People doing calorie restriction who end up with pre-anorexia or anorexia may not even realize they are in trouble.

There is a subset that will probably cross the threshold and lose perspective, said Bermudez, and those are the people who are unlikely to have a keen awareness of whats really happening with them.

Bermudez said that even though eating disorders are serious illnesses with the highest mortality rate of any mental illness there is hope, whether the trigger was extreme veganism or calorie restriction.

Treatment, though, works best with early diagnosis and effective intervention.

Since many people who do calorie restriction see a doctor regularly to make sure they arent slipping into malnutrition, these visits could also be a good time to check their mental health.

Asked whether calorie restriction makes sense in people, Bermudez pointed to the lack of long-term studies in humans.

If I owned a rat or a worm, and I wanted them to live for a long time, I would do calorie restriction for them, said Bermudez. But I wouldnt do it for my kids or my family because the data is simply lacking.

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5. Hematopoietic Stem Cells | stemcells.nih.gov

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

With more than 50 years of experience studying blood-forming stem cells called hematopoietic stem cells, scientists have developed sufficient understanding to actually use them as a therapy. Currently, no other type of stem cell, adult, fetal or embryonic, has attained such status. Hematopoietic stem cell transplants are now routinely used to treat patients with cancers and other disorders of the blood and immune systems. Recently, researchers have observed in animal studies that hematopoietic stem cells appear to be able to form other kinds of cells, such as muscle, blood vessels, and bone. If this can be applied to human cells, it may eventually be possible to use hematopoietic stem cells to replace a wider array of cells and tissues than once thought.

Despite the vast experience with hematopoietic stem cells, scientists face major roadblocks in expanding their use beyond the replacement of blood and immune cells. First, hematopoietic stem cells are unable to proliferate (replicate themselves) and differentiate (become specialized to other cell types) in vitro (in the test tube or culture dish). Second, scientists do not yet have an accurate method to distinguish stem cells from other cells recovered from the blood or bone marrow. Until scientists overcome these technical barriers, they believe it is unlikely that hematopoietic stem cells will be applied as cell replacement therapy in diseases such as diabetes, Parkinson's Disease, spinal cord injury, and many others.

Blood cells are responsible for constant maintenance and immune protection of every cell type of the body. This relentless and brutal work requires that blood cells, along with skin cells, have the greatest powers of self-renewal of any adult tissue.

The stem cells that form blood and immune cells are known as hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). They are ultimately responsible for the constant renewal of bloodthe production of billions of new blood cells each day. Physicians and basic researchers have known and capitalized on this fact for more than 50 years in treating many diseases. The first evidence and definition of blood-forming stem cells came from studies of people exposed to lethal doses of radiation in 1945.

Basic research soon followed. After duplicating radiation sickness in mice, scientists found they could rescue the mice from death with bone marrow transplants from healthy donor animals. In the early 1960s, Till and McCulloch began analyzing the bone marrow to find out which components were responsible for regenerating blood [56]. They defined what remain the two hallmarks of an HSC: it can renew itself and it can produce cells that give rise to all the different types of blood cells (see Chapter 4. The Adult Stem Cell).

A hematopoietic stem cell is a cell isolated from the blood or bone marrow that can renew itself, can differentiate to a variety of specialized cells, can mobilize out of the bone marrow into circulating blood, and can undergo programmed cell death, called apoptosisa process by which cells that are detrimental or unneeded self-destruct.

A major thrust of basic HSC research since the 1960s has been identifying and characterizing these stem cells. Because HSCs look and behave in culture like ordinary white blood cells, this has been a difficult challenge and this makes them difficult to identify by morphology (size and shape). Even today, scientists must rely on cell surface proteins, which serve, only roughly, as markers of white blood cells.

Identifying and characterizing properties of HSCs began with studies in mice, which laid the groundwork for human studies. The challenge is formidable as about 1 in every 10,000 to 15,000 bone marrow cells is thought to be a stem cell. In the blood stream the proportion falls to 1 in 100,000 blood cells. To this end, scientists began to develop tests for proving the self-renewal and the plasticity of HSCs.

The "gold standard" for proving that a cell derived from mouse bone marrow is indeed an HSC is still based on the same proof described above and used in mice many years ago. That is, the cells are injected into a mouse that has received a dose of irradiation sufficient to kill its own blood-producing cells. If the mouse recovers and all types of blood cells reappear (bearing a genetic marker from the donor animal), the transplanted cells are deemed to have included stem cells.

These studies have revealed that there appear to be two kinds of HSCs. If bone marrow cells from the transplanted mouse can, in turn, be transplanted to another lethally irradiated mouse and restore its hematopoietic system over some months, they are considered to be long-term stem cells that are capable of self-renewal. Other cells from bone marrow can immediately regenerate all the different types of blood cells, but under normal circumstances cannot renew themselves over the long term, and these are referred to as short-term progenitor or precursor cells. Progenitor or precursor cells are relatively immature cells that are precursors to a fully differentiated cell of the same tissue type. They are capable of proliferating, but they have a limited capacity to differentiate into more than one cell type as HSCs do. For example, a blood progenitor cell may only be able to make a red blood cell (see Figure 5.1. Hematopoietic and Stromal Stem Cell Differentiation ).

Figure 5.1. Hematopoietic and Stromal Stem Cell Differentiation.

( 2001 Terese Winslow, Lydia Kibiuk)

Harrison et al. write that short-term blood-progenitor cells in a mouse may restore hematopoiesis for three to four months [36]. The longevity of short-term stem cells for humans is not firmly established. A true stem cell, capable of self-renewal, must be able to renew itself for the entire lifespan of an organism. It is these long-term replicating HSCs that are most important for developing HSC-based cell therapies. Unfortunately, to date, researchers cannot distinguish the long-term from the short-term cells when they are removed from the bloodstream or bone marrow.

The central problem of the assays used to identify long-term stem cells and short-term progenitor cells is that they are difficult, expensive, and time-consuming and cannot be done in humans. A few assays are now available that test cells in culture for their ability to form primitive and long-lasting colonies of cells, but these tests are not accepted as proof that a cell is a long-term stem cell. Some genetically altered mice can receive transplanted human HSCs to test the cells' self-renewal and hematopoietic capabilities during the life of a mouse, but the relevance of this test for the cells in humanswho may live for decadesis open to question.

The difficulty of HSC assays has contributed to two mutually confounding research problems: definitively identifying the HSC and getting it to proliferate, or increase its numbers, in a culture dish. More rapid research progress on characterizing and using HSCs would be possible if they could be readily grown in the laboratory. Conversely, progress in identifying growth conditions suitable for HSCs and getting the cells to multiply would move more quickly if scientists could reliably and readily identify true HSCs.

HSCs have an identity problem. First, the ones with long-term replicating ability are rare. Second, there are multiple types of stem cells. And, third, the stem cells look like many other blood or bone marrow cells. So how do researchers find the desired cell populations? The most common approach is through markers that appear on the surface of cells. (For a more detailed discussion, see Appendix E.i. Markers: How Do Researchers Use Them to Identify Stem Cells?) These are useful, but not perfect tools for the research laboratory.

In 1988, in an effort to develop a reliable means of identifying these cells, Irving Weissman and his collaborators focused attention on a set of protein markers on the surface of mouse blood cells that were associated with increased likelihood that the cell was a long-term HSC [50]. Four years later, the laboratory proposed a comparable set of markers for the human stem cell [3]. Weissman proposes the markers shown in Table 5.1 as the closest markers for mouse and human HSCs [62].

* Only one of a family of CD59 markers has thus far been evaluated.** Lin- cells lack 13 to 14 different mature blood-lineage markers.

Such cell markers can be tagged with monoclonal antibodies bearing a fluorescent label and culled out of bone marrow with fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS).

The groups of cells thus sorted by surface markers are heterogeneous and include some cells that are true, long-term self-renewing stem cells, some shorter-term progenitors, and some non-stem cells. Weissman's group showed that as few as five genetically tagged cells, injected along with larger doses of stem cells into lethally irradiated mice, could establish themselves and produce marked donor cells in all blood cell lineages for the lifetime of the mouse. A single tagged cell could produce all lineages for as many as seven weeks, and 30 purified cells were sufficient to rescue mice and fully repopulate the bone marrow without extra doses of backup cells to rescue the mice [49]. Despite these efforts, researchers remain divided on the most consistently expressed set of HSC markers [27, 32]. Connie Eaves of the University of British Columbia says none of the markers are tied to unique stem cell functions or truly define the stem cell [14]. "Almost every marker I am aware of has been shown to be fickle," she says.

More recently, Diane Krause and her colleagues at Yale University, New York University, and Johns Hopkins University, used a new technique to home in on a single cell capable of reconstituting all blood cell lineages of an irradiated mouse [27]. After marking bone marrow cells from donor male mice with a nontoxic dye, they injected the cells into female recipient mice that had been given a lethal dose of radiation. Over the next two days, some of the injected cells migrated, or homed, to the bone marrow of the recipients and did not divide; when transplanted into a second set of irradiated female mice, they eventually proved to be a concentrated pool of self-renewing stem cells. The cells also reconstituted blood production. The scientists estimate that their technique concentrated the long-term stem cells 500 to 1,000- fold compared with bone marrow.

The classic source of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is bone marrow. For more than 40 years, doctors performed bone marrow transplants by anesthetizing the stem cell donor, puncturing a bonetypically a hipboneand drawing out the bone marrow cells with a syringe. About 1 in every 100,000 cells in the marrow is a long-term, blood-forming stem cell; other cells present include stromal cells, stromal stem cells, blood progenitor cells, and mature and maturing white and red blood cells.

As a source of HSCs for medical treatments, bone marrow retrieval directly from bone is quickly fading into history. For clinical transplantation of human HSCs, doctors now prefer to harvest donor cells from peripheral, circulating blood. It has been known for decades that a small number of stem and progenitor cells circulate in the bloodstream, but in the past 10 years, researchers have found that they can coax the cells to migrate from marrow to blood in greater numbers by injecting the donor with a cytokine, such as granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (GCSF). The donor is injected with GCSF a few days before the cell harvest. To collect the cells, doctors insert an intravenous tube into the donor's vein and pass his blood through a filtering system that pulls out CD34+ white blood cells and returns the red blood cells to the donor. Of the cells collected, just 5 to 20 percent will be true HSCs. Thus, when medical researchers commonly refer to peripherally harvested "stem cells," this is something of a misnomer. As is true for bone marrow, the CD34+ cells are a mixture of stem cells, progenitors, and white blood cells of various degrees of maturity.

In the past three years, the majority of autologous (where the donor and recipient are the same person) and allogeneic (where the donor and recipient are different individuals) "bone marrow" transplants have actually been white blood cells drawn from peripheral circulation, not bone marrow. Richard Childs, an intramural investigator at the NIH, says peripheral harvest of cells is easier on the donorwith minimal pain, no anesthesia, and no hospital staybut also yields better cells for transplants [6]. Childs points to evidence that patients receiving peripherally harvested cells have higher survival rates than bone marrow recipients do. The peripherally harvested cells contain twice as many HSCs as stem cells taken from bone marrow and engraft more quickly. This means patients may recover white blood cells, platelets, and their immune and clotting protection several days faster than they would with a bone marrow graft. Scientists at Stanford report that highly purified, mobilized peripheral cells that have CD34+ and Thy-1+ surface markers engraft swiftly and without complication in breast cancer patients receiving an autologous transplant of the cells after intensive chemotherapy [41].

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, physicians began to recognize that blood from the human umbilical cord and placenta was a rich source of HSCs. This tissue supports the developing fetus during pregnancy, is delivered along with the baby, and, is usually discarded. Since the first successful umbilical cord blood transplants in children with Fanconi anemia, the collection and therapeutic use of these cells has grown quickly. The New York Blood Center's Placental Blood Program, supported by NIH, is the largest U.S. public umbilical cord blood bank and now has 13,000 donations available for transplantation into small patients who need HSCs. Since it began collecting umbilical cord blood in 1992, the center has provided thousands of cord blood units to patients. Umbilical cord blood recipientstypically childrenhave now lived in excess of eight years, relying on the HSCs from an umbilical cord blood transplant [31, 57].

There is a substantial amount of research being conducted on umbilical cord blood to search for ways to expand the number of HSCs and compare and contrast the biological properties of cord blood with adult bone marrow stem cells. There have been suggestions that umbilical cord blood contains stem cells that have the capability of developing cells of multiple germ layers (multipotent) or even all germ layers, e.g., endoderm, ectoderm, and mesoderm (pluripotent). To date, there is no published scientific evidence to support this claim. While umbilical cord blood represents a valuable resource for HSCs, research data have not conclusively shown qualitative differences in the differentiated cells produced between this source of HSCs and peripheral blood and bone marrow.

An important source of HSCs in research, but not in clinical use, is the developing blood-producing tissues of fetal animals. Hematopoietic cells appear early in the development of all vertebrates. Most extensively studied in the mouse, HSC production sweeps through the developing embryo and fetus in waves. Beginning at about day 7 in the life of the mouse embryo, the earliest hematopoietic activity is indicated by the appearance of blood islands in the yolk sac (see Appendix A. Early Development). The point is disputed, but some scientists contend that yolk sac blood production is transient and will generate some blood cells for the embryo, but probably not the bulk of the HSCs for the adult animal [12, 26, 44]. According to this proposed scenario, most stem cells that will be found in the adult bone marrow and circulation are derived from cells that appear slightly later and in a different location. This other wave of hematopoietic stem cell production occurs in the AGMthe region where the aorta, gonads, and fetal kidney (mesonephros) begin to develop. The cells that give rise to the HSCs in the AGM may also give rise to endothelial cells that line blood vessels. [13]. These HSCs arise at around days 10 to 11 in the mouse embryo (weeks 4 to 6 in human gestation), divide, and within a couple of days, migrate to the liver [11]. The HSCs in the liver continue to divide and migrate, spreading to the spleen, thymus, andnear the time of birthto the bone marrow.

Whereas an increasing body of fetal HSC research is emerging from mice and other animals, there is much less information about human fetal and embryonic HSCs. Scientists in Europe, including Coulombel, Peault, and colleagues, first described hematopoietic precursors in human embryos only a few years ago [20, 53]. Most recently, Gallacher and others reported finding HSCs circulating in the blood of 12- to 18-week aborted human fetuses [16, 28, 54] that was rich in HSCs. These circulating cells had different markers than did cells from fetal liver, fetal bone marrow, or umbilical cord blood.

In 1985, it was shown that it is possible to obtain precursors to many different blood cells from mouse embryonic stem cells [9]. Perkins was able to obtain all the major lineages of progenitor cells from mouse embryoid bodies, even without adding hematopoietic growth factors [45].

Mouse embryonic stem cells in culture, given the right growth factors, can generate most, if not all, the different blood cell types [19], but no one has yet achieved the "gold standard" of proof that they can produce long-term HSCs from these sourcesnamely by obtaining cells that can be transplanted into lethally irradiated mice to reconstitute long-term hematopoiesis [32].

The picture for human embryonic stem and germ cells is even less clear. Scientists from James Thomson's laboratory reported in 1999 that they were able to direct human embryonic stem cellswhich can now be cultured in the labto produce blood progenitor cells [23]. Israeli scientists reported that they had induced human ES cells to produce hematopoietic cells, as evidenced by their production of a blood protein, gamma-globin [21]. Cell lines derived from human embryonic germ cells (cultured cells derived originally from cells in the embryo that would ultimately give rise to eggs or sperm) that are cultured under certain conditions will produce CD34+ cells [47]. The blood-producing cells derived from human ES and embryonic germ (EG) cells have not been rigorously tested for long-term self-renewal or the ability to give rise to all the different blood cells.

As sketchy as data may be on the hematopoietic powers of human ES and EG cells, blood experts are intrigued by their clinical potential and their potential to answer basic questions on renewal and differentiation of HSCs [19]. Connie Eaves, who has made comparisons of HSCs from fetal liver, cord blood, and adult bone marrow, expects cells derived from embryonic tissues to have some interesting traits. She says actively dividing blood-producing cells from ES cell cultureif they are like other dividing cellswill not themselves engraft or rescue hematopoiesis in an animal whose bone marrow has been destroyed. However, they may play a critical role in developing an abundant supply of HSCs grown in the lab. Indications are that the dividing cells will also more readily lend themselves to gene manipulations than do adult HSCs. Eaves anticipates that HSCs derived from early embryo sources will be developmentally more "plastic" than later HSCs, and more capable of self-renewal [14].

Scientists in the laboratory and clinic are beginning to measure the differences among HSCs from different sources. In general, they find that HSCs taken from tissues at earlier developmental stages have a greater ability to self-replicate, show different homing and surface characteristics, and are less likely to be rejected by the immune systemmaking them potentially more useful for therapeutic transplantation.

When do HSCs move from the early locations in the developing fetus to their adult "home" in the bone marrow? European scientists have found that the relative number of CD34+ cells in the collections of cord blood declined with gestational age, but expression of cell-adhesion molecules on these cells increased.

The authors believe these changes reflect preparations for the cells to relocatefrom homing in fetal liver to homing in bone marrow [52].

The point is controversial, but a paper by Chen et al. provides evidence that at least in some strains of mice, HSCs from old mice are less able to repopulate bone marrow after transplantation than are cells from young adult mice [5]. Cells from fetal mice were 50 to 100 percent better at repopulating marrow than were cells from young adult mice were. The specific potential for repopulating marrow appears to be strain-specific, but the scientists found this potential declined with age for both strains. Other scientists find no decreases or sometimes increases in numbers of HSCs with age [51]. Because of the difficulty in identifying a long-term stem cell, it remains difficult to quantify changes in numbers of HSCs as a person ages.

A practical and important difference between HSCs collected from adult human donors and from umbilical cord blood is simply quantitative. Doctors are rarely able to extract more than a few million HSCs from a placenta and umbilical cordtoo few to use in a transplant for an adult, who would ideally get 7 to 10 million CD34+ cells per kilogram body weight, but often adequate for a transplant for a child [33, 48].

Leonard Zon says that HSCs from cord blood are less likely to cause a transplantation complication called graft-versus-host disease, in which white blood cells from a donor attack tissues of the recipient [65]. In a recent review of umbilical cord blood transplantation, Laughlin cites evidence that cord blood causes less graft-versus-host disease [31]. Laughlin writes that it is yet to be determined whether umbilical cord blood HSCs are, in fact, longer lived in a transplant recipient.

In lab and mouse-model tests comparing CD34+ cells from human cord with CD34+ cells derived from adult bone marrow, researchers found cord blood had greater proliferation capacity [24]. White blood cells from cord blood engrafted better in a mouse model, which was genetically altered to tolerate the human cells, than did their adult counterparts.

In addition to being far easier to collect, peripherally harvested white blood cells have other advantages over bone marrow. Cutler and Antin's review says that peripherally harvested cells engraft more quickly, but are more likely to cause graft-versus-host disease [8]. Prospecting for the most receptive HSCs for gene therapy, Orlic and colleagues found that mouse HSCs mobilized with cytokines were more likely to take up genes from a viral vector than were non-mobilized bone marrow HSCs [43].

As stated earlier, an HSC in the bone marrow has four actions in its repertoire: 1) it can renew itself, 2) it can differentiate, 3) it can mobilize out of the bone marrow into circulation (or the reverse), or 4) it can undergo programmed cell death, or apoptosis. Understanding the how, when, where, which, and why of this simple repertoire will allow researchers to manipulate and use HSCs for tissue and organ repair.

Scientists have had a tough time trying to growor even maintaintrue stem cells in culture. This is an important goal because cultures of HSCs that could maintain their characteristic properties of self-renewal and lack of differentiation could provide an unlimited source of cells for therapeutic transplantation and study. When bone marrow or blood cells are observed in culture, one often observes large increases in the number of cells. This usually reflects an increase in differentiation of cells to progenitor cells that can give rise to different lineages of blood cells but cannot renew themselves. True stem cells divide and replace themselves slowly in adult bone marrow.

New tools for gene-expression analysis will now allow scientists to study developmental changes in telomerase activity and telomeres. Telomeres are regions of DNA found at the end of chromosomes that are extended by the enzyme telomerase. Telomerase activity is necessary for cells to proliferate and activity decreases with age leading to shortened telomeres. Scientists hypothesize that declines in stem cell renewal will be associated with declines in telomere length and telomerase activity. Telomerase activity in hematopoietic cells is associated with self-renewal potential [40].

Because self-renewal divisions are rare, hard to induce in culture, and difficult to prove, scientists do not have a definitive answer to the burning question: what putsor perhaps keepsHSCs in a self-renewal division mode? HSCs injected into an anemic patient or mouseor one whose HSCs have otherwise been suppressed or killedwill home to the bone marrow and undergo active division to both replenish all the different types of blood cells and yield additional self-renewing HSCs. But exactly how this happens remains a mystery that scientists are struggling to solve by manipulating cultures of HSCs in the laboratory.

Two recent examples of progress in the culturing studies of mouse HSCs are by Ema and coworkers and Audet and colleagues [2, 15]. Ema et al. found that two cytokinesstem cell factor and thrombo-poietinefficiently induced an unequal first cell division in which one daughter cell gave rise to repopulating cells with self-renewal potential. Audet et al. found that activation of the signaling molecule gp130 is critical to survival and proliferation of mouse HSCs in culture.

Work with specific cytokines and signaling molecules builds on several earlier studies demonstrating modest increases in the numbers of stem cells that could be induced briefly in culture. For example, Van Zant and colleagues used continuous-perfusion culture and bioreactors in an attempt to boost human HSC numbers in single cord blood samples incubated for one to two weeks [58]. They obtained a 20-fold increase in "long-term culture initiating cells."

More clues on how to increase numbers of stem cells may come from looking at other animals and various developmental stages. During early developmental stagesin the fetal liver, for exampleHSCs may undergo more active cell division to increase their numbers, but later in life, they divide far less often [30, 42]. Culturing HSCs from 10- and 11-day-old mouse embryos, Elaine Dzierzak at Erasmus University in the Netherlands finds she can get a 15-fold increase in HSCs within the first 2 or 3 days after she removes the AGM from the embryos [38]. Dzierzak recognizes that this is dramatically different from anything seen with adult stem cells and suggests it is a difference with practical importance. She suspects that the increase is not so much a response to what is going on in the culture but rather, it represents the developmental momentum of this specific embryonic tissue. That is, it is the inevitable consequence of divisions that were cued by that specific embryonic microenvironment. After five days, the number of HSCs plateaus and can be maintained for up to a month. Dzierzak says that the key to understanding how adult-derived HSCs can be expanded and manipulated for clinical purposes may very well be found by defining the cellular composition and complex molecular signals in the AGM region during development [13].

In another approach, Lemischka and coworkers have been able to maintain mouse HSCs for four to seven weeks when they are grown on a clonal line of cells (AFT024) derived from the stroma, the other major cellular constituent of bone marrow [39]. No one knows which specific factors secreted by the stromal cells maintain the stem cells. He says ongoing gene cloning is rapidly zeroing in on novel molecules from the stromal cells that may "talk" to the stem cells and persuade them to remain stem cellsthat is, continue to divide and not differentiate.

If stromal factors provide the key to stem cell self-renewal, research on maintaining stromal cells may be an important prerequisite. In 1999, researchers at Osiris Therapeutics and Johns Hopkins University reported culturing and expanding the numbers of mesenchymal stem cells, which produce the stromal environment [46]. Whereas cultured HSCs rush to differentiate and fail to retain primitive, self-renewing cells, the mesenchymal stem cells could be increased in numbers and still retained their powers to generate the full repertoire of descendant lineages.

Producing differentiated white and red blood cells is the real work of HSCs and progenitor cells. M.C. MacKey calculates that in the course of producing a mature, circulating blood cell, the original hematopoietic stem cell will undergo between 17 and 19.5 divisions, "giving a net amplification of between ~170,000 and ~720,000" [35].

Through a series of careful studies of cultured cellsoften cells with mutations found in leukemia patients or cells that have been genetically alteredinvestigators have discovered many key growth factors and cytokines that induce progenitor cells to make different types of blood cells. These factors interact with one another in complex ways to create a system of exquisite genetic control and coordination of blood cell production.

Scientists know that much of the time, HSCs live in intimate connection with the stroma of bone marrow in adults (see Chapter 4. The Adult Stem Cell). But HSCs may also be found in the spleen, in peripheral blood circulation, and other tissues. Connection to the interstices of bone marrow is important to both the engraftment of transplanted cells and to the maintenance of stem cells as a self-renewing population. Connection to stroma is also important to the orderly proliferation, differentiation, and maturation of blood cells [63].

Weissman says HSCs appear to make brief forays out of the marrow into tissues, then duck back into marrow [62]. At this time, scientists do not understand why or how HSCs leave bone marrow or return to it [59]. Scientists find that HSCs that have been mobilized into peripheral circulation are mostly non-dividing cells [64]. They report that adhesion molecules on the stroma, play a role in mobilization, in attachment to the stroma, and in transmitting signals that regulate HSC self-renewal and progenitor differentiation [61].

The number of blood cells in the bone marrow and blood is regulated by genetic and molecular mechanisms. How do hematopoietic stem cells know when to stop proliferating? Apoptosis is the process of programmed cell death that leads cells to self-destruct when they are unneeded or detrimental. If there are too few HSCs in the body, more cells divide and boost the numbers. If excess stem cells were injected into an animal, they simply wouldn't divide or would undergo apoptosis and be eliminated [62]. Excess numbers of stem cells in an HSC transplant actually seem to improve the likelihood and speed of engraftment, though there seems to be no rigorous identification of a mechanism for this empirical observation.

The particular signals that trigger apoptosis in HSCs are as yet unknown. One possible signal for apoptosis might be the absence of life-sustaining signals from bone marrow stroma. Michael Wang and others found that when they used antibodies to disrupt the adhesion of HSCs to the stroma via VLA-4/VCAM-1, the cells were predisposed to apoptosis [61].

Understanding the forces at play in HSC apoptosis is important to maintaining or increasing their numbers in culture. For example, without growth factors, supplied in the medium or through serum or other feeder layers of cells, HSCs undergo apoptosis. Domen and Weissman found that stem cells need to get two growth factor signals to continue life and avoid apoptosis: one via a protein called BCL-2, the other from steel factor, which, by itself, induces HSCs to produce progenitor cells but not to self-renew [10].

Among the first clinical uses of HSCs were the treatment of cancers of the bloodleukemia and lymphoma, which result from the uncontrolled proliferation of white blood cells. In these applications, the patient's own cancerous hematopoietic cells were destroyed via radiation or chemotherapy, then replaced with a bone marrow transplant, or, as is done now, with a transplant of HSCs collected from the peripheral circulation of a matched donor. A matched donor is typically a sister or brother of the patient who has inherited similar human leukocyte antigens (HLAs) on the surface of their cells. Cancers of the blood include acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute myeloblastic leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), Hodgkin's disease, multiple myeloma, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.

Thomas and Clift describe the history of treatment for chronic myeloid leukemia as it moved from largely ineffective chemotherapy to modestly successful use of a cytokine, interferon, to bone marrow trans-plantsfirst in identical twins, then in HLA-matched siblings [55]. Although there was significant risk of patient death soon after the transplant either from infection or from graft-versus-host disease, for the first time, many patients survived this immediate challenge and had survival times measured in years or even decades, rather than months. The authors write, "In the space of 20 years, marrow transplantation has contributed to the transformation of [chronic myelogenous leukemia] CML from a fatal disease to one that is frequently curable. At the same time, experience acquired in this setting has improved our understanding of many transplant-related problems. It is now clear that morbidity and mortality are not inevitable consequences of allogeneic transplantation, [and] that an allogeneic effect can add to the anti-leukemic power of conditioning regimens"

In a recent development, CML researchers have taken their knowledge of hematopoietic regulation one step farther. On May 10, 2001, the Food and Drug Administration approved Gleevec (imatinib mesylate), a new, rationally designed oral drug for treatment of CML. The new drug specifically targets a mutant protein, produced in CML cancer cells, that sabotages the cell signals controlling orderly division of progenitor cells. By silencing this protein, the new drug turns off cancerous overproduction of white blood cells, so doctors do not have to resort to bone marrow transplantation. At this time, it is unknown whether the new drug will provide sustained remission or will prolong life for CML patients.

Another use of allogeneic bone marrow transplants is in the treatment of hereditary blood disorders, such as different types of inherited anemia (failure to produce blood cells), and inborn errors of metabolism (genetic disorders characterized by defects in key enzymes need to produce essential body components or degrade chemical byproducts). The blood disorders include aplastic anemia, beta-thalassemia, Blackfan-Diamond syndrome, globoid cell leukodystrophy, sickle-cell anemia, severe combined immunodeficiency, X-linked lymphoproliferative syndrome, and Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. Inborn errors of metabolism that are treated with bone marrow transplants include: Hunter's syndrome, Hurler's syndrome, Lesch Nyhan syndrome, and osteopetrosis. Because bone marrow transplantation has carried a significant risk of death, this is usually a treatment of last resort for otherwise fatal diseases.

Chemotherapy aimed at rapidly dividing cancer cells inevitably hits another targetrapidly dividing hematopoietic cells. Doctors may give cancer patients an autologous stem cell transplant to replace the cells destroyed by chemotherapy. They do this by mobilizing HSCs and collecting them from peripheral blood. The cells are stored while the patient undergoes intensive chemotherapy or radiotherapy to destroy the cancer cells. Once the drugs have washed out of a patient's body, the patient receives a transfusion of his or her stored HSCs. Because patients get their own cells back, there is no chance of immune mismatch or graft-versus-host disease. One problem with the use of autologous HSC transplants in cancer therapy has been that cancer cells are sometimes inadvertently collected and reinfused back into the patient along with the stem cells. One team of investigators finds that they can prevent reintroducing cancer cells by purifying the cells and preserving only the cells that are CD34+, Thy-1+[41].

One of the most exciting new uses of HSC transplantation puts the cells to work attacking otherwise untreatable tumors. A group of researchers in NIH's intramural research program recently described this approach to treating metastatic kidney cancer [7]. Just under half of the 38 patients treated so far have had their tumors reduced. The research protocol is now expanding to treatment of other solid tumors that resist standard therapy, including cancer of the lung, prostate, ovary, colon, esophagus, liver, and pancreas.

This experimental treatment relies on an allogeneic stem cell transplant from an HLA-matched sibling whose HSCs are collected peripherally. The patient's own immune system is suppressed, but not totally destroyed. The donor's cells are transfused into the patient, and for the next three months, doctors closely monitor the patient's immune cells, using DNA fingerprinting to follow the engraftment of the donor's cells and regrowth of the patient's own blood cells. They must also judiciously suppress the patient's immune system as needed to deter his/her T cells from attacking the graft and to reduce graft-versus-host disease.

A study by Joshi et al. shows that umbilical cord blood and peripherally harvested human HSCs show antitumor activity in the test tube against leukemia cells and breast cancer cells [22]. Grafted into a mouse model that tolerates human cells, HSCs attack human leukemia and breast cancer cells. Although untreated cord blood lacks natural killer (NK) lymphocytes capable of killing tumor cells, researchers have found that at least in the test tube and in mice, they can greatly enhance the activity and numbers of these cells with cytokines IL-15 [22, 34].

Substantial basic and limited clinical research exploring the experimental uses of HSCs for other diseases is underway. Among the primary applications are autoimmune diseases, such as diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and system lupus erythematosis. Here, the body's immune system turns to destroying body tissues. Experimental approaches similar to those applied above for cancer therapies are being conducted to see if the immune system can be reconstituted or reprogrammed. More detailed discussion on this application is provided in Chapter 6. Autoimmune Diseases and the Promise of Stem Cell-Based Therapies. The use of HSCs as a means to deliver genes to repair damaged cells is another application being explored. The use of HSCs for gene therapies is discussed in detail in Chapter 11. Use of Genetically Modified Stem Cells in Experimental Gene Therapies.

A few recent reports indicate that scientists have been able to induce bone marrow or HSCs to differentiate into other types of tissue, such as brain, muscle, and liver cells. These concepts and the experimental evidence supporting this concept are discussed in Chapter 4. The Adult Stem Cell.

Research in a mouse model indicates that cells from grafts of bone marrow or selected HSCs may home to damaged skeletal and cardiac muscle or liver and regenerate those tissues [4, 29]. One recent advance has been in the study of muscular dystrophy, a genetic disease that occurs in young people and leads to progressive weakness of the skeletal muscles. Bittner and colleagues used mdx mice, a genetically modified mouse with muscle cell defects similar to those in human muscular dystrophy. Bone marrow from non-mdx male mice was transplanted into female mdx mice with chronic muscle damage; after 70 days, researchers found that nuclei from the males had taken up residence in skeletal and cardiac muscle cells.

Lagasse and colleagues' demonstration of liver repair by purified HSCs is a similarly encouraging sign that HSCs may have the potential to integrate into and grow in some non-blood tissues. These scientists lethally irradiated female mice that had an unusual genetic liver disease that could be halted with a drug. The mice were given transplants of genetically marked, purified HSCs from male mice that did not have the liver disease. The transplants were given a chance to engraft for a couple of months while the mice were on the liver-protective drug. The drug was then removed, launching deterioration of the liverand a test to see whether cells from the transplant would be recruited and rescue the liver. The scientists found that transplants of as few as 50 cells led to abundant growth of marked, donor-derived liver cells in the female mice.

Recently, Krause has shown in mice that a single selected donor hematopoietic stem cell could do more than just repopulate the marrow and hematopoietic system of the recipient [27]. These investigators also found epithelial cells derived from the donors in the lungs, gut, and skin of the recipient mice. This suggests that HSCs may have grown in the other tissues in response to infection or damage from the irradiation the mice received.

In humans, observations of male liver cells in female patients who have received bone marrow grafts from males, and in male patients who have received liver transplants from female donors, also suggest the possibility that some cells in bone marrow have the capacity to integrate into the liver and form hepatocytes [1].

Clinical investigators share the same fundamental problem as basic investigatorslimited ability to grow and expand the numbers of human HSCs. Clinicians repeatedly see that larger numbers of cells in stem cell grafts have a better chance of survival in a patient than do smaller numbers of cells. The limited number of cells available from a placenta and umbilical cord blood transplant currently means that cord blood banks are useful to pediatric but not adult patients. Investigators believe that the main cause of failure of HSCs to engraft is host-versus-graft disease, and larger grafts permit at least some donor cells to escape initial waves of attack from a patient's residual or suppressed immune system [6]. Ability to expand numbers of human HSCs in vivo or in vitro would clearly be an enormous boost to all current and future medical uses of HSC transplantation.

Once stem cells and their progeny can be multiplied in culture, gene therapists and blood experts could combine their talents to grow limitless quantities of "universal donor" stem cells, as well as progenitors and specific types of red and white blood cells. If the cells were engineered to be free of markers that provoke rejection, these could be transfused to any recipient to treat any of the diseases that are now addressed with marrow, peripheral, cord, or other transfused blood. If gene therapy and studies of the plasticity of HSCs succeed, the cells could also be grown to repair other tissues and treat non-blood-related disorders [32].

Several research groups in the United States, Canada, and abroad have been striving to find the key factor or factors for boosting HSC production. Typical approaches include comparing genes expressed in primitive HSCs versus progenitor cells; comparing genes in actively dividing fetal HSCs versus adult HSCs; genetic screening of hematopoietically mutated zebrafish; studying dysregulated genes in cancerous hematopoietic cells; analyzing stromal or feeder-layer factors that appear to boost HSC division; and analyzing factors promoting homing and attachment to the stroma. Promising candidate factors have been tried singly and in combination, and researchers claim they can now increase the number of long-term stem cells 20-fold, albeit briefly, in culture.

The specific assays researchers use to prove that their expanded cells are stem cells vary, which makes it difficult to compare the claims of different research groups. To date, there is only a modest ability to expand true, long-term, self-renewing human HSCs. Numbers of progenitor cells are, however, more readily increased. Kobari et al., for example, can increase progenitor cells for granulocytes and macrophages 278-fold in culture [25].

Some investigators are now evaluating whether these comparatively modest increases in HSCs are clinically useful. At this time, the increases in cell numbers are not sustainable over periods beyond a few months, and the yield is far too low for mass production. In addition, the cells produced are often not rigorously characterized. A host of other questions remainfrom how well the multiplied cells can be altered for gene therapy to their potential longevity, immunogenicity, ability to home correctly, and susceptibility to cancerous transformation. Glimm et al. [17] highlight some of these problems, for example, with their confirmation that human stem cells lose their ability to repopulate the bone marrow as they enter and progress through the cell cyclelike mouse stem cells that have been stimulated to divide lose their transplantability [18]. Observations on the inverse relationship between progenitor cell division rate and longevity in strains of mice raise an additional concern that culture tricks or selection of cells that expand rapidly may doom the cells to a short life.

Pragmatically, some scientists say it may not be necessary to be able to induce the true, long-term HSC to divide in the lab. If they can manipulate progenitors and coax them into division on command, gene uptake, and differentiation into key blood cells and other tissues, that may be sufficient to accomplish clinical goals. It might be sufficient to boost HSCs or subpopulations of hematopoietic cells within the body by chemically prodding the bone marrow to supply the as-yet-elusive factors to rejuvenate cell division.

Currently, the risks of bone marrow transplantsgraft rejection, host-versus-graft disease, and infection during the period before HSCs have engrafted and resumed full blood cell productionrestrict their use to patients with serious or fatal illnesses. Allogeneic grafts must come from donors with a close HLA match to the patient (see Chapter 6. Autoimmune Diseases and the Promise of Stem Cell-Based Therapies). If doctors could precisely manipulate immune reactions and protect patients from pathogens before their transplants begin to function, HSC transplants could be extended to less ill patients and patients for whom the HLA match was not as close as it must now be. Physicians might use transplants with greater impunity in gene therapy, autoimmune disease, HIV/AIDS treatment, and the preconditioning of patients to accept a major organ transplant.

Scientists are zeroing in on subpopulations of T cells that may cause or suppress potentially lethal host-versus-graft rejection and graft-versus-host disease in allogeneic-transplant recipients. T cells in a graft are a two-edged sword. They fight infections and help the graft become established, but they also can cause graft-versus-host disease. Identifying subpopulations of T cells responsible for deleterious and beneficial effectsin the graft, but also in residual cells surviving or returning in the hostcould allow clinicians to make grafts safer and to ratchet up graft-versus-tumor effects [48]. Understanding the presentation of antigens to the immune system and the immune system's healthy and unhealthy responses to these antigens and maturation and programmed cell death of T cells is crucial.

The approach taken by investigators at Stanfordpurifying peripheral bloodmay also help eliminate the cells causing graft-versus-host disease. Transplants in mouse models support the idea that purified HSCs, cleansed of mature lymphocytes, engraft readily and avoid graft-versus-host disease [60].

Knowledge of the key cellular actors in autoimmune disease, immune grafting, and graft rejection could also permit scientists to design gentler "minitransplants." Rather than obliterating and replacing the patient's entire hematopoietic system, they could replace just the faulty components with a selection of cells custom tailored to the patient's needs. Clinicians are currently experimenting with deletion of T cells from transplants in some diseases, for example, thereby reducing graft-versus-host disease.

Researchers are also experimenting with the possibility of knocking down the patient's immune systembut not knocking it out. A blow that is sublethal to the patient's hematopoietic cells given before an allogeneic transplant can be enough to give the graft a chance to take up residence in the bone marrow. The cells replace some or all of the patient's original stem cells, often making their blood a mix of donor and original cells. For some patients, this mix of cells will be enough to accomplish treatment objectives but without subjecting them to the vicious side effects and infection hazards of the most powerful treatments used for total destruction of their hematopoietic systems [37].

At some point in embryonic development, all cells are plastic, or developmentally flexible enough to grow into a variety of different tissues. Exactly what is it about the cell or the embryonic environment that instructs cells to grow into one organ and not another?

Could there be embryological underpinnings to the apparent plasticity of adult cells? Researchers have suggested that a lot of the tissues that are showing plasticity are adjacent to one another after gastrulation in the sheet of mesodermal tissue that will go on to form bloodmuscle, blood vessels, kidney, mesenchyme, and notochord. Plasticity may reflect derivation from the mesoderm, rather than being a fixed trait of hematopoietic cells. One lab is now studying the adjacency of embryonic cells and how the developing embryo makes the decision to make one tissue instead of anotherand whether the decision is reversible [65].

In vivo studies of the plasticity of bone marrow or purified stem cells injected into mice are in their infancy. Even if follow-up studies confirm and more precisely characterize and quantify plasticity potential of HSCs in mice, there is no guarantee that it will occur or can be induced in humans.

Grounded in half a century of research, the study of hematopoietic stem cells is one of the most exciting and rapidly advancing disciplines in biomedicine today. Breakthrough discoveries in both the laboratory and clinic have sharply expanded the use and supply of life-saving stem cells. Yet even more promising applications are on the horizon and scientists' current inability to grow HSCs outside the body could delay or thwart progress with these new therapies. New treatments include graft-versus-tumor therapy for currently incurable cancers, autologous transplants for autoimmune diseases, and gene therapy and tissue repair for a host of other problems. The techniques, cells, and knowledge that researchers have now are inadequate to realize the full promise of HSC-based therapy.

Key issues for tapping the potential of hematopoietic stem cells will be finding ways to safely and efficiently expand the numbers of transplantable human HSCs in vitro or in vivo. It will also be important to gain a better understanding of the fundamentals of how immune cells workin fighting infections, in causing transplant rejection, and in graft-versus-host disease as well as master the basics of HSC differentiation. Concomitant advances in gene therapy techniques and the understanding of cellular plasticity could make HSCs one of the most powerful tools for healing.

Chapter 4|Table of Contents|Chapter 6

Historical content: June 17, 2001

Continued here:
5. Hematopoietic Stem Cells | stemcells.nih.gov

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FDA to crack down on clinics illegally offering stem cell treatments – Marketplace.org

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

ByMarielle Segarra

August 29, 2017 | 11:35 AM

The Food and Drug Administration announced that it plans to crack down on health clinics that it says are providing unproven, unsafe stem cell treatments.

Stem cells help repair injured tissues in the human body. They can divide and then morph into other kinds of cells red blood cells, muscle cells, whatever our bodies need. Scientists have been trying to figure out whether they can use stem cell injections to treat certain diseases, but for the most part, theres not enough evidence yet that these treatments are safe or that they work.

Nearly600 clinics around the U.S., many in California and Florida, market stem cell treatments, according to a study published last year in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Cell Stem Cell.

Some clinics claim to use stem cells to treat diseases like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's disease), Alzheimers disease, and Parkinsons disease. Others offer procedures they say can roll back the effects of aging, like stem cell face-lifts.

"You can just find hundreds of businesses making these unsubstantiated marketing claims," said Leigh Turner, the study's co-author and associate professor at the University of Minnesota's Center for Bioethics, "and that's where you run into a lot of problems in terms of the risk that people are spending thousands or tens of thousands of dollars and effectively being defrauded."

These treatments can also be dangerous, Turner said; in some patients, theyve caused blindness, tumors and even death.

Stem cell treatments are regulated by the FDA, but federal lawleaves some wiggle room. If a clinic meets a few requirements, like only manipulating cells in certain ways before injecting them, it doesnt have to get FDA approval. A lot of providers say they're exempt under this provision, and in some cases, that's not true.

Yesterday, the agency said it would step up enforcement on clinics that are breaking the law. This fall, it also plans to release new guidelines to make it clearer which treatments have to get approval and what the process entails.

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FDA to crack down on clinics illegally offering stem cell treatments - Marketplace.org

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Brain Dead Patients Could Be Brought ‘Back to Life’ in Groundbreaking Stem Cell Therapy – Wall Street Pit

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

This is not about creating zombies-those so-called living (or walking) dead that are very popular and make a really great theme for TV shows and movies.

Even the Game of Thrones has its version of the living dead with them nasty creatures called White Walkers and Wights.

But then again, thats only science fiction, isnt it? Well, maybe not. In fact, this science-fiction plot could soon play out in real life. Read on.

Researchers from U.S.-based biotech company Bioquark are aimimg to resurrect patients who have been declared brain dead. Yep, you read it right. Resurrect, just like those stories in the Bible. Really bringing back people to life.

It goes without saying that this is really a serious matter. More importantly, Bioquarks small pilot study has been approved and gotten ethical permission by none other than the National Institutes of Health. The study would be an attempt to reawaken the clinically-dead brains of patients who have suffered serious brain injuries.

How will Bioquark do it?

Through stem cell therapy, which has been proven successful already in treating various diseases such as acquired ataxia, Alzheimers disease, Bells Palsy, cerebral atrophy, cirrhosis, optic nerve damage, osteoarthritis, and leukemia.

But, with brain-dead people, its going to be a real challenge since this condition according to medical experts is irreversible.

Brain death is different from a heart thats already stopped beating. A heart can still be revived and sustained by a ventilator or life-support system.

However, in the case of brain death, you cannot revive dead neurons with the help of a life-support machine even though it continues to pump oxygen to the body. The oxygen will get into the other organs like the heart, but it can no longer be utilized by the brain when the neurons are dead.

Neurons are the working units of the brain, specialized cells which are responsible for transmitting information to other nerve cells, gland cells, and muscles.They form networks or connections in the brain which number up to trillions.

A traumatic brain injury, sudden cardiac arrest, or a stroke caused by a ruptured blood vessel in the brain can cause brain tissues to start dying due to oxygen deprivation.

Oxygen-Deprived Brains Timeline:

However, Bioquark is hopeful that stem cell treatment may spur the growth of new neurons to replace the dead ones and pave the way to revive a clinically dead brain. After all, the brain is a fighter and scientists have found out that our gray matter has a small reservoir of stem cells which can produce new neurons.

Researchers are thinking of the possibility of urging these stem cells to generate new neurons which can remedy injured brain tissues. One other option is to inject neural stem cells into the brain of a person who has just died, and these may generate the necessary new neurons to help revive the brain.

Soon, Bioquark will find out the answer or learn some more information from their pilot study which is the first stage of the companys broaderReanima project. The project is exploring the potential of cutting edge biomedical technology for human neuro-regeneration and neuro-reanimation as a way to hopefully give patients and their loved ones a second chance in life.

Bioquark is set to conduct this very first human trial in partnership with the Indian biotech company Revita Life Sciences which specializes in stem cell treatment.

Excerpt from:
Brain Dead Patients Could Be Brought 'Back to Life' in Groundbreaking Stem Cell Therapy - Wall Street Pit

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FDA, US Marshals Seize Smallpox Vaccine Used for Stem Cell Cancer Treatment – DeathRattleSports.com

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

Five vials of a live vaccine virus used to inoculate against smallpox were seized by the U.S. Marshals from stem cell treatment centers in California that had been used to treat cancer patients.

The potentially dangerous and unproven treatment combined a live version of the Vaccinia virus vaccine and stem cells that originated in body fat, and injected them directly into patients tumors, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

The treatments were apparently not approved by the regulatory agency.

The FDA will not allow deceitful actors to take advantage of vulnerable patients by purporting to have treatments or cures for serious diseases without any proof that they actually work, said Scott Gottlieb, the FDA Commissioner.

The Vaccinia virus vaccine was instrumental in eradicating smallpox in the 20th century though it does not contain smallpox itself. Currently doses are reserved for people at risk for smallpox, including members of the military who may have to face a bioterrorism event.

The U.S. Marshals seized five vials of the vaccine on Friday. Each of the containers held approximately 100 doses of the vaccine. Four were recovered intact but the fifth had been partly used.

StemImmune touts stem-cell-based immunotherapies capable of unleashing a stealth attack on cancer on its website. The company, which was founded in 2014, also contends it is working with the FDA on an investigational new drug application to allow a Phase I and Phase II clinical trial of its leading product candidate.

In a statement released to Laboratory Equipment, StemImmune said safety of patients is paramount.

StemImmune is fully cooperating with the FDA about the development and use of its stem cell-based investigational cancer therapy, the company said. Our primary concern has and continues to be the safety and well-being of patients in clinical trials and compassionate use programs. At this time, we are working to understand and address the questions raised by the FDA about the use of our therapy for cancer patients in individual compassionate use programs in clinics. As more information becomes available to us, we will update this statement.

The contested treatments were administered to cancer patients at two California Stem Cell Treatment Centers, one in Rancho Mirage and the other in Beverly Hills.

The patients could have had compromised immune systems and may have been at risk for adverse effects like heart inflammation, the FDA contends.

The people who were in contact with the patients may have been at risk additionally for becoming infected with the live virus used in the vaccine. The health effects could have included inflammation and swelling for at-risk unvaccinated people, including those who were pregnant, who had heart or immune system problems, or skin problems like eczema and psoriasis or other conditions, they FDA said.

I especially wont allow cases such as this one to go unchallenged, where we have good medical reasons to believe these purported treatments can actually harm patients and make their conditions worse, added Gottlieb.

Smallpox has been considered eradicated since the last case was reported in Kenya in 1977 although some advocate stockpiling the Vaccinia vaccines in case of a biological weapons terror attack.

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FDA, US Marshals Seize Smallpox Vaccine Used for Stem Cell Cancer Treatment - DeathRattleSports.com

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There is Life After Death According to Quantum Physics – Edgy Labs (blog)

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

According to Biocentrism, death is not the end of the journey, but a journey.

Life goes on in a parallel universe regardless of what happens to it in this one.

Now he has departed from this strange world a little ahead of me. Wrote Einstein in a condolence letter upon the death of his close friend, Michele Besso, in 1955. That signifies nothing. For those of us who believe in physics, the distinction between past, present, and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion.

Einstein died merely a month after he wrote the letter and, apparently, he was right, as new scientific theories suggest that death, just like life, is but an illusion.

Quantum physics laws tells us that life is not made of matter but of vibrations that escape time and space.

What happens when we die? Where does the human conscience come from? Does the brain perceive or create (then perceive) what we call reality? If consciousness doesnt originate from the brain, then the presence of physical envelopes isnt crucial for it to exist.

I regard consciousness as fundamental. I regard matter as derivative from consciousness. Said Max Planck, Nobel Prize-winning physicist, We cannot get behind consciousness. Everything that we talk about, everything that we regard as existing, postulates consciousness.

Biocentrism builds on that and goes on to suggest that consciousness creates the universe or reality, that time and space are mere illusions, manifestations in our minds, and that reality is determined by the observer.

Biocentrism and Relativity predict the same phenomena, but biocentrism, according to its fans, is superior because it does not need to imagine an extra dimension or new mathematics to be formulated.

Biocentrism claims that life is immortal and that its at the center of existence, reality, and the cosmos. By adding life and consciousness to the equation, biocentrism is believed by its adepts to be the theory of everything.

Robert Lanza is a highly qualified scientist and a priori a very serious person. Hes specialized in stem cells, cloning, and regenerative medicine research. Lanza has a distinguished career with articles devoted to him in prestigious publications.

In 2014, he made the Time Magazines list of the 100 most influential people in the world, and in 2015, Prospect Magazine selected him as one of the Worlds Thinkers 2015.

In 2009, Lanza published his book BIOCENTRISM: How Life and Consciousness are the Keys to Understanding the True Nature of the Universe in which he places biology above other sciences and calls for a switch from physics to biology to understand everything.

Dr. Lanza says that he thinks he is succeeding in the unification that Einstein would have failed to achieve, claiming that Einstein only considered reality from the physical side, without giving much thought to biology.

Lanza claims that quantum physics has proved the existence of life after death, that energy is immortal, and so is life.

For Lanza, we believe in death because we have been taught that we are dying, however, biocentrism says the universe exists only because the individual is aware of it.

Life and biology create this reality, and the universe itself does not create life. The concepts of time and space, according to Lanza, are simply tools of our imagination.

Last year, Lanza, along with astronomer Bob Berman, revisited his controversial theory in a new book, Beyond Biocentrism.

Continue reading here:
There is Life After Death According to Quantum Physics - Edgy Labs (blog)

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Howell Brown, cancer patient who inspired Duke Blue Devils and … – News & Observer

August 30th, 2017 10:41 am

In the nearly five years Howell Brown III was in Durham for cancer treatments, he touched the lives of many including those in Dukes and N.C. Centrals athletics departments.

Howell, a huge NASCAR fan who loved playing with John Deere tractors, was just 9 when he was diagnosed with Stage IV Pineoblastoma. According to St. Judes Childrens Research Hopsitals website, Pineoblastoma is an aggressive and rare type of tumor of the brains pineal gland, a tiny organ located deep inside the brain that secretes ... a hormone called melatonin, which controls sleep.

In November 2012, Howells mother, Sue, brought him from Asheville to Duke Childrens Hospital for treatments. He had surgeries, chemotherapy, radiation and an infusion with his own stem cells. Along the way, walking and eating disorders complicated his condition. In 2015, he learned the cancer had spread to his spine.

Howell died Friday at age 13.

Throughout his illness, Howell became a source of encouragement for others and touched athletes and coaches at Duke and N.C. Central.

Dont give up. Just keep fighting through it even if you dont feel like doing it... Howell said the day he signed a football scholarship with N.C. Central. Youre going to go over the waves and the waves, and youre going to eventually hit the smooth part.

Duke football coach David Cutcliffe and his players met Howell during visits to Duke Childrens Hospital in 2013. Cutcliffe invited him to practices and to hang out with the team.

Duke football coach David Cutcliffe visits with 13-year-old Howell Brown during a team practice session last February. Brown died after a five-year battle with cancer on Friday.

Duke Athletics

In 2014, working in conjuction with Team IMPACT, a Boston company that connects seriously ill children with college sports teams, Howell spent the football season attending N.C. Centrals practices, games and social events.

That same year, during a time Howell was declared tumor-free, he signed a mock football scholarship with the Eagles and attended a press conference to celebrate the event. He played table tennis and bowled with the teams players and coaches.

In February 2016, the Make-A-Wish Foundation sponsored a trip for Howell, a huge NASCAR fan, to attend the Daytona 500.

Howell did his best to help others facing health scares. In April 2016, not long after Charles Westfall, a Duke fan from Morrisville, had been diagnosed with cardiomyopathy and was told he might need a heart transplant, he received an encouraging call from Howell. Westfalls former roommate had met Howell at the Duke football office and gave Howell Westfalls number.

He left a voicemail describing what had happened to him, how it took a year to re-learn to walk after his cancer had spread to his spine, Westfall said Sunday. I can still hear a semblance of that message in that mountain twang in my head.

Photojournalist Viviane Feldman of Hillsborough, who graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill last May, published a photo essay entitled HB3 and Me about Howells battle with cancer.

On Saturday, the day after Howell died, condolences from the athletics programs poured out on social media.

This Young Angel on Earth changed many lives for the better in 13+ years, Duke football coach David Cutcliffe posted on Twitter. Hes now an Angel of Heaven. RIP HOWELL BROWN lll.

Rest In Peace Howell Brown. Thank you for touching our lives & uplifting us with your spirit. N.C. Centrals athletics department tweeted.

Thankful to have known Howell Brown! former Duke football player and current assitant coach Cody Robinson wrote on Twitter . He did more in his short life than most do in a lifetime! Thanks for teaching us how to live HB3!

Jenna Frush, a Duke Medical School student who was a Duke basketball guard from 2011-15, was among a group of people who spent time with Howell daily over the final month of his life.

He was stronger than cancer can ever be, Frush said.

On Saturday, she posted a photo on Instagram of a smiling Howell Brown wearing a Duke T-shirt with these words:

Youre my hero, bud, Frush said. I love you with all my heart.

Originally posted here:
Howell Brown, cancer patient who inspired Duke Blue Devils and ... - News & Observer

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Preston accepted into OSU’s veterinary medicine program – Sequoyah County Times

August 30th, 2017 10:40 am

Darian Preston of Muldrow, recently began her journey to earn a DVM degree from Oklahoma State Universitys Center for Veterinary Health Sciences. Preston is one of 106 students in the class of 2021 and the daughter of Brent and Charity Preston of Muldrow.

As a land grant university, training the next generation of veterinarians is one of our core missions, said Dr. Chris Ross, professor and interim dean of the veterinary center. We strive to graduate competent veterinarians who can serve the needs of Oklahoma, the nation and the world. Students spend the first three years primarily in the classroom studying anatomy, pharmacology, pathology and more. Their fourth year will be spent honing their clinical skills in our Veterinary Medical Hospital as they apply what they have learned in the classroom to real life cases.

A DVM degree offers veterinarians many career choices including private practice, biomedical research, military service, academia, the pharmaceutical industry, government positions and more. Students in Oklahoma States program will be trained in all species as well as some specialty services, for example, ophthalmology, anesthesia, digital imaging, theriogenology and food animal production.

The class of 2021 is comprised of 58 Oklahoma residents and 48 non-residents representing Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Toronto, Canada.

Link:
Preston accepted into OSU's veterinary medicine program - Sequoyah County Times

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Sandites accepted into OSU’s Veterinary Medicine Program – Tulsa World

August 30th, 2017 10:40 am

Kayce Ingram and Nicole Turvey, both of Sand Springs, recently began their journey to earn a DVM degree from Oklahoma State Universitys Center for Veterinary Health Sciences. They are among the 106 students in the class of 2021. Ingram is the daughter of Spencer and Nancy Ingram of Sand Springs. Turvey is the daughter of George and Gay Turvey of Skiatook.

As a land grant university, training the next generation of veterinarians is one of our core missions, Dr. Chris Ross, professor and interim dean of the veterinary center, said in a statement. We strive to graduate competent veterinarians who can serve the needs of Oklahoma, the nation and the world. Students spend the first three years primarily in the classroom studying anatomy, pharmacology, pathology and more. Their fourth year will be spent honing their clinical skills in our Veterinary Medical Hospital as they apply what they have learned in the classroom to real life cases.

A DVM degree offers veterinarians many career choices including private practice, biomedical research, military service, academia, the pharmaceutical industry, government positions and more. Students in Oklahoma States program will be trained in all species as well as some specialty services, for example, ophthalmology, anesthesia, digital imaging, theriogenology and food animal production.

The class of 2021 is comprised of 58 Oklahoma residents and 48 non-residents representing Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Indiana, Kansas, Massachusetts, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Toronto, Canada.

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Sandites accepted into OSU's Veterinary Medicine Program - Tulsa World

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AVMA helping veterinarians take on telemedicine – American Veterinary Medical Association

August 30th, 2017 10:40 am

By Katie Burns

Posted Aug. 30, 2017

The AVMA is providing guidance and soon a toolkit to help veterinarians take on telemedicine in practice.

On July 21 at its regular annual session in Indianapolis, the AVMA House of Delegates passed a policy on telemedicine and accompanying revisions to the Model Veterinary Practice Act, which is a model for state practice acts.

Dr. Lori Teller, District VIII representative on the AVMA Board of Directors, said ahead of the regular annual session of the House that the AVMA has spent more than two years thoughtfully and thoroughly considering the potential impacts of telemedicine on the public and the profession. She updated HOD members on the Association's activities in the area of telemedicine.

In 2016, the AVMA Practice Advisory Panel completed a comprehensive report on telemedicine. In 2017, the Association solicited feedback on the report from members, stakeholders, and the general public. The "Policy on Telemedicine" draws on the report and the feedback.

"Telemedicine is a tool that may be utilized to augment the practice of veterinary medicine," according to the policy. "The AVMA is committed to ensuring access to the convenience and benefits afforded by telemedicine, while promoting the responsible provision of high quality veterinary medical care."

Per the policy, "Given the current state of technological capabilities, available research, and the current state and federal regulatory landscape, the AVMA believes that veterinary telemedicine should only be conducted within an existing Veterinarian-Client-Patient Relationship (VCPR), with the exception for advice given in an emergency until that patient can be seen by a veterinarian."

According to language added to the Model Veterinary Practice Act in 2003, "A veterinarian-client-patient relationship cannot be established solely by telephonic or other electronic means." Much of the telemedicine policy offers guidance on the VCPR in the context of telemedicine.

The new policy also states, "Telemedicine regulations should be harmonized across the nation and strongly enforced to protect patient and public safety."

In a separate action, the House revised the Model Veterinary Practice Act to reflect the new telemedicine policy.

The telemedicine policy notes that federal law requires a VCPR for prescribing drugs in an extralabel manner for animals and issuing veterinary feed directives. Dr. Teller said in her update that the Food and Drug Administration currently does not allow for the VCPR to be established by electronic or telephonic means.

According to the policy, "The AVMA recognizes that future policy in this area will be informed by evidence-based research on the impact of telemedicine on access to care and patient safety."

The AVMA is developing an extensive toolkit and guidelines for members who are interested in using telemedicine in practice, Dr. Teller said. The toolkit and guidelines will include information on policies, laws, and regulations; potential applications; an FAQ; descriptions of various service models; and guidance on monetization. The goal is to have the first phase available by September and the remainder by June 2018.

The AVMA also is in the process of notifying pertinent associations and government agencies about the new policy.

Defining relationships (June 1, 2017)

Advisory panel report offers guidance on telemedicine (March 1, 2017)

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AVMA helping veterinarians take on telemedicine - American Veterinary Medical Association

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