Category Archives: Stem Cell Treatment


California Proposed Initiative Enters Circulation: Authorizes Bonds to Continue Funding Stem Cell and Other Medical Research – Sierra Sun Times

December 19, 2019 - SACRAMENTO, CA- Secretary of State Alex Padilla announced that the proponent of a new initiative was cleared to begin collecting petition signatures.

The Attorney General prepares the legal title and summary that is required to appear on initiative petitions. When the official language is complete, the Attorney General forwards it to the proponent and to the Secretary of State, and the initiative may be circulated for signatures. The Secretary of State then provides calendar deadlines to the proponent and to county elections officials. The Attorney Generals official title and summary for the measure is as follows:

AUTHORIZES BONDS TO CONTINUE FUNDING STEM CELL AND OTHER MEDICAL RESEARCH. INITIATIVE STATUTE.Authorizes $5.5 billion in state general obligation bonds to fund grants from the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine to educational, non-profit, and private entities for: (1) stem cell and other medical research, therapy development, and therapy delivery; (2) medical training; and (3) construction of research facilities. Dedicates $1.5 billion to fund research and therapy for Alzheimers, Parkinsons, stroke, epilepsy, and other brain and central nervous system diseases and conditions. Limits bond issuance to $540 million annually. Appropriates money from General Fund to repay bond debt, but postpones repayment for first five years. Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local governments:State costs of $7.8 billion to pay off principal ($5.5 billion) and interest ($2.3 billion) on the bonds. Associated average annual debt payments of about $310 million for 25 years. The costs could be higher or lower than these estimates depending on factors such as the interest rate and the period of time over which the bonds are repaid. The state General Fund would pay most of the costs, with a relatively small amount of interest repaid by bond proceeds.(19-0022A1.)

The Secretary of States tracking number for this measure is 1880 and the Attorney General's tracking number is 19-0022.

The proponent of the measure, Robert N. Klein, must collect signatures of 623,212 registered voters (five percent of the total votes cast for Governor in the November 2018 general election) in order to qualify it for the ballot. The proponent has 180 days to circulate petitions for the measure, meaning the signatures must be submitted to county elections officials no later than June 15, 2020*. The proponent can be reached c/o James C. Harrison of Remcho, Johansen & Purcell, LLP at (510) 346-6203. The address for Remcho, Johansen & Purcell, LLP is 1901 Harrison Street, Suite 1550, Oakland, CA 94612.

*Date adjusted for official deadline, which falls on a Sunday (Elec. Code 15)Source: CA. SOS

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California Proposed Initiative Enters Circulation: Authorizes Bonds to Continue Funding Stem Cell and Other Medical Research - Sierra Sun Times

Waning treatment is a warning for all ‘one-and-done’ therapies – STAT – STAT

As a new mother, she didnt know to look for blue-tinged lips. She could just tell her babys color was off. On a chest X-ray, the clean, white-against-dark curves of his ribs were obscured, clouded by fluid. Pneumonia. That tipped Ray Ballards physicians off: He had a form of severe combined immunodeficiency SCID, for short a genetic mutation that hampered the growth of crucial immune cells, leaving him utterly vulnerable to infection.

The best fix was a transplant of his mothers bone marrow. The attitude was that in three to six months, you should be able to go back to normal life, recalled his mom, Barb Ballard.

That was true at least sort of. He got two more booster transplants before he hit 10. An antibiotic left him with hearing loss, and a virus with digestive tract damage. His lack of B cells meant he needed regular injections of other peoples antibodies, and his T cell counts were never ideal. But he was healthy enough to go to public school, to move through the hallways high-fiving half the guys, to slowly inhale and take aim during rifle team practice.

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His T cells had to be working well enough that he wasnt coming down with everything that walked into the classroom, Ballard said.

Then, when Ray was around 18, his immunity began to wane. For him, it came in the form of a norovirus he couldnt shake. For others with the same rare disease, it appears as pneumonia or gastrointestinal trouble or an unexpected T cell decline. Over the last 10 years, the trend has become increasingly clear: The bone marrow transplants that kept certain babies with SCID alive sometimes stop working after years or decades of providing fairly reliable immune defenses.

Now, to patient advocates, this has become an urgent lesson in the language people use to talk about treatment and not just for SCID. They see their communitys experience as a cautionary tale for anyone developing or receiving a therapy thats marketed as potentially curative.

Theres an expectation and a hope: When they hear about bone marrow transplants, it sounds like a lifetime deal, a forever fix, said John Boyle, president and CEO of the Immune Deficiency Foundation. Weve discovered, as a result of this issue, that bone marrow transplant ended up not being the forever fix we thought it was.

Experts have known for years that some of these transplants wouldnt provide full immune protection over the course of a SCID patients entire life. They say clinicians should have avoided the word cure. But even scientific papers that hinted at such complications called the treatment curative. Just this year, an Immune Deficiency Foundation employee was given the unenviable task of sifting through the organizations thousands of pages of online material, scrubbing out every cure that popped up. It was only there a handful of times sometimes in quotes from clinicians, Boyle said but it was there and it needed to be removed.

The language patients hear can sometimes even change their outcomes. Weve heard of cases where, years later, they realized their immune system isnt as healthy as they thought, but nobody was tracking that because they hadnt maintained a relationship with the physician, or the physician didnt maintain a relationship with them, explained Ballard. The word cure, it gives them a false sense of security.

At a time when seemingly every biotech is promoting the idea of one-and-done therapies and setting prices accordingly these advocates hope companies, too, will be more wary. One of the things Im trying to make them very aware of is the need for lifelong follow-up, said Heather Smith, who runs the SCID Angels for Life foundation. For her, its personal: This summer, her son took part in a clinical trial for a gene therapy in the hope that it would provide the immune protection that his decades-old bone marrow transplant no longer could. My son will be followed for 15 years, she said. But what about after that?

Part of the issue with bone marrow transplants from one person to another is the natural genetic variation between us, particularly in the proteins that help our bodies distinguish its own cells from foreign ones. Receiving cells from someone whose proteins dont match yours could cause a civil war within you. Thats why bone marrow transplants began back in the 1950s with identical twins: Sharing those genes meant increasing the likelihood of harmony between the body and the graft.

But the vast majority of people dont have a protein-matched sibling, let alone an identical twin. So researchers set about figuring out how to transplant bone marrow from a parent to a child in spite of only sharing half of their genes and from a matched unrelated donor to a stranger. Like cooks intent on refining recipes to their taste, the doctors who adapted the technique for SCID often did so slightly differently from one another. Over the past 35 years, those idiosyncrasies have hardened into habits. Right now, everybody transplants their patients their way, said Dr. Sung-Yun Pai, an immune deficiency researcher and co-director of the gene therapy program at Boston Childrens Hospital.

Perhaps the most vociferous controversy has been about whether to use chemotherapy to wipe out the existing stem cells within a recipients bone marrow to make room for the donors. The doctors who do use chemo before a transplant might prescribe different doses; others forego it entirely.

The arguments were sound on both sides. On the one hand, the toxic drugs could clean out the niches within our bone and increase the chances that the donors cells take root. On the other, these chemicals could hamper growth, brain development, and fertility, could make an infant who was already sick even sicker, and could increase the likelihood of certain cancers later in life. Its like being exposed to a bunch of X-rays and sunlight, or other DNA-damaging agents, Pai explained.

Because SCID is so rare the most common subtype is thought to occur in 1 out of every 50,000 to 100,000 newborns and because every hospital was doing transplants slightly differently, it was hard for physicians to systematically study what was working best. But even early on, they could tell that some of the infants whod gotten no chemo were developing incomplete immune systems. They didnt produce their own B cells, for instance, and so needed regular injections of antibodies collected from other peoples blood.

In healthy infants, stem cells migrate from the crevices of the skeleton to an organ in the chest called the thymus, where theyre trained to become T cells. In these infants, the T cell counts grew after transplant but it wasnt necessarily because the sludge was securely taking hold in the niches of their bones. Rather, immunologists say, the donors progenitor cells were only transient. Some were able to head toward the thymus for schooling. Some graduated and started fighting off infections. But as those populations were depleted with age, there werent robust reserves of stem cells in the bone marrow that could arrive to produce more. To Pai, its like trying to fill a kindergarten class in a neighborhood where no ones having babies.

You and I continue to have a slow trickle of new T cells coming out, said Dr. Harry Malech, a senior investigator at the National Institutes of Health, who sits on the board of a gene therapy company, Orchard Therapeutics (ORTX), but does not receive any financial compensation. Instead of a torrent becoming slower, in these patients it goes from a trickle to practically nothing.

Thats why immunity starts to wane in kids like Ray Ballard. To many immunologists, it isnt a surprise, though they still arent sure why chemo-less transplants last longer for some of these kids than others. They can also understand how some families and clinicians might have viewed this treatment as a lifetime fix.

As Malech put it, If I said to you, Your child, instead of dying in infancy, will likely get to adulthood, go to school, have a normal life, you might think the word cure in your mind.

Even for parents who knew the protection might not last forever, the failure of a long-ago bone marrow transplant puts them in a bind. If they do nothing, their child will once again be vulnerable to any passing infection, which could prove fatal. They can try another round of the same procedure, though booster transplants sometimes come with added complications. Or they can try getting their child into a research trial for gene therapy, which comes with the risks of any experimental treatment.

Some feel an irrational guilt when the bone marrow they donated to their child stops functioning. Its your cells, and if it doesnt work, you failed them, said Ballard, who lives in Clifton, Va., about a 40-minute drive from Washington, D.C. Her son Ray had already had three transplants as a child. When his immune system started to fail again in early adulthood, gene therapy at the NIH seemed like the only reasonable choice.

That would involve researchers removing cells from his bone marrow, using an engineered virus as a kind of molecular syringe to slip in a healthy copy of the gene in which he had a defect, and then threading these corrected cells back into his veins a bone marrow transplant to himself. But preparing a virus can be tricky, and there were delays.

Meanwhile, Rays condition was getting worse. His norovirus was preventing him from absorbing much nutrition, and as Ballard put it, his bone structure was just crumbling at that point. His doctors told her he had the skeleton of an 85-year-old.

He died this past February, at 25 years old. One friend got his birth and death dates tattooed onto her shoulder. Another painted a portrait of him for Ballard, in which his arms are crossed, his lips pressed together in a wry smile.

At Boston Childrens, Pai is now helping to lead a randomized trial to better understand what dose of chemo works best for SCID patients receiving transplants. Over the last decade or so, she, Malech, and many other clinicians have also teamed up to track the long-term results of immune deficient patients whove received someone elses bone marrow.

Pai is hopeful that knowing about the phenomenon of waning immunity will give gene therapies a better shot at becoming a durable fix. They probably have a better chance of achieving a one-time, lifelong cure, but its never wrong to be humble, she said. Only after decades more and hundreds or thousands of patients will we know for sure.

Patient advocates point out that even then, these patients will still have the capacity of passing on their SCID-causing gene to future generations, and so the word cure is overly optimistic. Thats why I like the word remission, said Smith. That still gives you the hope. If you were given a cancer diagnosis, you wouldnt go through treatment and then just forget about it for the rest of your life.

As Boyle put it, Weve seen the promise and then weve seen the reality. Everyone who is looking at a transformational therapy should be optimistic, but also realistic, and not assume that this is truly one and done. (Boyles foundation has received financial support from Orchard Therapeutics, which is developing a gene therapy for a form of SCID.)

To Amy Saada, of South Windsor, Conn., that isnt theoretical. Her son Adam is now 12, and the immunity from the bone marrow transplant he got as a baby is wearing off. He isnt yet sick, but his parents know they need to decide between gene therapy or another transplant soon. She has a very clear memory of how long and uncertain the recovery from treatment felt. In some ways, she wishes she didnt know quite as much as she does; that way, she would feel less trepidation about what lies ahead.

Your heart kind of sinks, she said. Youve already been through it once, and it was hell. Its harder the second time.

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Waning treatment is a warning for all 'one-and-done' therapies - STAT - STAT

Evotec Achieves Third Milestone In Cell Therapy Diabetes Alliance With Sanofi – Yahoo Finance

HAMBURG, GERMANY / ACCESSWIRE / December 19, 2019 / Evotec SE (Frankfurt Stock Exchange: EVT, MDAX/TecDAX, ISIN: DE0005664809) today announced successful achievement of a third milestone in their diabetes research alliance with Sanofi ("TargetBCD"), resulting in a payment of 3 m to Evotec.

This milestone was triggered after Evotec met pre-agreed critical criteria within the beta cell replacement therapy programme. The ultimate goal of the collaboration is to develop a beta cell replacement therapy for people with diabetes based on beta cells derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells.

Dr Cord Dohrmann, Chief Scientific Officer of Evotec, commented: "We are extremely pleased with the progress we are making on this beta cell therapy approach which has the potential to restore beta cell function and, thereby, address the root cause of diabetes rather than only its symptoms."

About the Evotec-Sanofi-Alliance in Diabetes ("TargetBCD")In August 2015, Evotec and Sanofi announced a research alliance to develop a beta cell replacement therapy based on functional human beta cells derived from human stem cells for diabetes. Both companies have made significant contributions to this collaboration in terms of expertise, platforms and resources. The collaboration, which is a key value-driving relationship under the Company's EVT Innovate business segment, extends Evotec's metabolic disease and stem cell-based drug discovery programmes. To date, Evotec has received 12 m in upfront and milestone payments from Sanofi, as well as substantial research funding.

About DiabetesDiabetes mellitus ("diabetes") is a chronic incapacitating disease associated with severe lifelong conditions which require intensive monitoring and control, such as cardiovascular diseases, kidney diseases, nerve damage and eye diseases. At present, there is no cure for diabetes and only symptomatic treatment options are available. According to the International Diabetes Federation, approximately 425 million people worldwide suffered from diabetes in 2017 (2015:415 million). The disease is a major burden to the global healthcare systems with $ 727 bn being spent on the treatment of diabetes in 2017 (2015: $ 673 bn).

About Beta CellsBeta cells play a key role in the pathogenesis of diabetes. Beta cells reside in clusters of hormone producing cells ("islets") within the pancreas. They respond to elevated blood glucose levels (e.g. after a meal) by secreting the glucose lowering hormone insulin. In the type 1 form of diabetes ("T1D"), beta cells are destroyed by the patient's own immune system. As a result, T1D patients have to follow a life-long regimen of carefully-dosed insulin injections. In patients with type 2 diabetes ("T2D"), beta cells are functionally impaired and yet have to work in the presence of metabolic stress and increased work load due to an impaired tissue insulin response. T2D is progressive, and current therapeutic options cannot prevent the deterioration of beta cell function, eventually also creating a need for insulin injections. Despite the fact that insulin treatments are important and widely used for people with diabetes, they cannot fully mimic the normal control of blood glucose levels by normal beta cells necessary to avoid acute and long-term complications of diabetes. There is a critical medical need for novel therapeutic options which can restore beta cell mass and, thereby, reduce or eliminate the need for insulin injections. Furthermore, beta cell replacement therapy also has the potential to prevent or reverse the decline in beta cell function in type 2 diabetes.

ABOUT EVOTEC SEEvotec is a drug discovery alliance and development partnership company focused on rapidly progressing innovative product approaches with leading pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, academics, patient advocacy groups and venture capitalists. We operate worldwide and our more than 2,900 employees provide the highest quality stand-alone and integrated drug discovery and development solutions. We cover all activities from target-to-clinic to meet the industry's need for innovation and efficiency in drug discovery and development (EVT Execute). The Company has established a unique position by assembling top-class scientific experts and integrating state-of-the-art technologies as well as substantial experience and expertise in key therapeutic areas including neuronal diseases, diabetes and complications of diabetes, pain and inflammation, oncology, infectious diseases, respiratory diseases and fibrosis. On this basis, Evotec has built a broad and deep pipeline of approx. 100 co-owned product opportunities at clinical, pre-clinical and discovery stages (EVT Innovate). Evotec has established multiple long-term alliances with partners including Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Celgene, CHDI, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, Sanofi, Takeda, UCB and others. For additional information please go to http://www.evotec.com and follow us on Twitter @Evotec.

FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTSInformation set forth in this press release contains forward-looking statements, which involve a number of risks and uncertainties. The forward-looking statements contained herein represent the judgement of Evotec as of the date of this press release. Such forward-looking statements are neither promises nor guarantees, but are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control, and which could cause actual results to differ materially from those contemplated in these forward-looking statements. We expressly disclaim any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any such statements to reflect any change in our expectations or any change in events, conditions or circumstances on which any such statement is based.

Contact Evotec SE:Gabriele Hansen, SVP Corporate Communications, Marketing & Investor Relations, Phone: +49.(0)40.56081-255, gabriele.hansen@evotec.com

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Evotec Achieves Third Milestone In Cell Therapy Diabetes Alliance With Sanofi - Yahoo Finance

A new role for a triple-negative breast cancer target – Penn: Office of University Communications

Unlike almost every other organ, the mammary gland does not develop until after birth. And its unusually dynamic, shape-shifting during menstrual cycles, puberty, pregnancy, and lactation.

These changes require energy. In a study usinga new, genetically altered mouse model, researchers led by Rumela Chakrabarti of Penns School of Veterinary Medicine haveuncovered a key protein involved in supplying the mammary gland with fuel during puberty. Its a protein that her group had earlier shown to play a role in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), a particularly aggressive form of the disease.

Besides illuminating an important feature of mammalian biological development, the findings also give reassurance that targeting this protein, known as deltaNp63, to treat cancer in adults could be done without interfering with critical developmental stages that occur later in life.

Creating a new mouse model that allows us to control when p63 is expressed enabled us to study this molecule in different developmental stages, Chakrabarti says of the work, published in the journal FEBS Letters. The fact that it is not required later on after puberty means that its a viable drug target for triple-negative breast cancer. And we think it could be applicable to other cancers, like squamous cell carcinomas and esophageal cancer as well.

Chakrabarti has focused on this molecule since her postdoctoral fellowship, revealing different features of its involvement in the mammary gland stem cells that give rise to every other cell type in the mammary gland tissue. In 2014, Chakrabarti and colleagues found it was important in initiating TNBC, and last year they demonstrated that it also acts to direct a type of immune cell to breast tumors, serving to aggravate the progression and spread of cancer.

Weve found that this molecule is like a master regulator, says Chakrabarti. It can regulate the tumor cells stem cell activity, and it can regulate the immune cells around the tumor cells. But we also wanted to know how it acted in normal cells.

To do that, the researchers fashioned a new strain of mice in which they could deplete the animals of deltaNp63 as desired. With this mouse model in hand, they were able to assess how deleting that gene affected the mammary gland.

While inducing the deletion of deltaNp63 during pregnancy and adulthood had no significant effect on mammary gland development and function, the team found significant impacts arose when deletion occurred during puberty.

It may be that the initial burst of energy that is required during puberty depends on deltaNp63, but once you get through that, it isnt as critical, says Chakrabarti.

Losing the protein during puberty led to a reduction in energy production in the mammary gland cells and caused mammary gland ducts to be malformed. Further analysis suggests that deltaNp63 likely activates other proteins that are involved in both cellular metabolism and in the organization of cell structure during puberty.

We already knew that p63 was important for mammary gland stem cells, but we didnt know that it was involved in regulating the cells metabolism, Chakrabarti says. Mammary stem cells have a high energy need during the extensive tissue remodeling that occurs during puberty. Cancer cells also have a high energy need. So this finding helps tie together a number of roles that p63 seems to be playing in the mammary gland.

In follow-up work, Chakrabartis lab is investigating the connection between metabolism and TNBC, with an eye toward pursuing deltaNp63 as a possible therapeutic target to slow down the spread of disease.

Rumela Chakrabarti is an assistant professor of biomedical sciences in the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine.

Chakrabartis coauthors from Penn Vet were first author Sushil Kumar, Ajeya Nandi, and Aakash Mahesh. In addition, Satrajit Sinha of the State University of New York at Buffalo and Elsa Flores of the Moffit Cancer Center coauthored the paper.

Support for the study came from the Penn Vet Comparative Pathology Core, the Flow Cytometry Core at the University of Pennsylvania and Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia.

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A new role for a triple-negative breast cancer target - Penn: Office of University Communications

Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market 2018: Report Highlights the Competitive Scenario with Impact of Drivers and Challenges to 2026 – Market…

Global Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Size, Status and Forecast 2018-2026offers a primary overview of the Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy industry covering Definition, Classification, Industry Value, Price, Cost and Gross Profit, Share via Region, New Challenge Feasibility Evaluation, Analysis and Guidelines on New mission Investment. Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market report presents in-intensity insight of Company Profile, Capacity, Product Specifications, Production Value, Sales, Revenue, Price, Gross Margin, Market Size and Market Shares for topmost prime key vendors: BioRestorative Therapies, Inc., Celltex Therapeutics Corporation, Antria, Inc., Cytori Therapeutics Inc., Intrexon Corporation, Mesoblast Ltd., iXCells Biotechnologies, Pluristem Therapeutics, Inc., Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc., Tissue Genesis, Inc., Cyagen US Inc., Celprogen, Inc., and Lonza Group, among others.. In the end, there are 4 key segments covered in this Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy market report: competitor segment, product type segment, end use/application segment and geography segment.

Target Audience of Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market: Suppliers, Channel Partners, Production Companies, Market Consultants, Marketing Authorities, Research Institutions, Subject Matter Experts, Financial Institutions, Government Authorities.

To Get the Concise Free Sample PDF of the Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Report, Along With the TOC, Statistics, and Tables Please Visit

Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Summary: This report includes the estimation of market size for value (million US$) and volume (K sqm). Both top-down and bottom-up approaches have been used to estimate and validate the market size of Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy market, to estimate the size of various other dependent submarkets in the overall market. Key players in the market have been identified through secondary research, and their market shares have been determined through primary and secondary research. All percentage shares, splits, and breakdowns have been determined using secondary sources and verified primary sources.

Based on Classifications, each type is studied as Sales, Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Share (%), Revenue (Million USD), Price, Gross Margin and more similar information. each type, including:

Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Taxonomy:-

The global adipose derived stem cell therapy market is segmented on the basis of cell type, product type, application, end user, and region.

By Cell Type

By Product Type

By Application

By End User

By Region

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Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market: Regional Analysis Includes:

Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.)North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada.)South America (Brazil etc.)The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt.)Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers (2018 2026)

Industrial Chain Analysis of Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy market:

Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Capacity, Production and GrowthProduction, Consumption, Export and ImportRevenue and Growth of MarketAdipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Forecast (2018 2026)

Adipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market by Capacity, Production, Revenue ForecastProduction Forecast by Type and Price ForecastConsumption Forecast by ApplicationProduction, Import, Export and Consumption ForecastAdipose Derived Stem Cell Therapy Market Production, Consumption, Import and Export Forecast by Regions (Provinces)

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New Gene Therapy Method May Open BRAVE New World in Parkinson’s – Parkinson’s News Today

A new method allows researchers to develop adeno-associated virus (AVV) commonly used as the vehicle for gene therapies that accurately target and deliver genes to specific cells in the body.

This new technology may be suitable to target dopaminergic neurons that are damaged in Parkinsons disease.

We believe that the new synthetic [lab-made] virus we succeeded in creating would be very well suited for gene therapy for Parkinsons disease, for example, and we have high hopes that these virus vectors will be able to be put into clinical use, Tomas Bjrklund, PhD,Lund University, Sweden, said in a press release.

Bjrklund is lead author of the studyA systematic capsid evolution approach performed in vivo for the design of AAV vectors with tailored properties and tropism, which was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The adeno-associated virus (AAV)is a common, naturally-occurring virus, which has been shown to work as an effective gene therapy delivery vehicle for genetic diseases, such asspinal muscular atrophy. In gene therapy, scientists deliver a working version of a faulty gene using a harmless AAV that was modified and inactivated in the lab. This way the virus functions only as a delivery vehicle and does not have the capacity to damage tissues and cause disease.

While AAVs have a natural ability to penetrate any cell of the body and infect as many cells as possible, their usefulness as a potential therapy requires the capacity to specifically deliver a working gene to a particular cell type, such as dopamine producing-nerve cells. Those are the ones hose responsible for releasing the neurotransmitter dopamine and that are gradually lost during Parkinsons disease.

A team of Swedish researchers have developed a new method called barcoded rational AAV vector evolution, or BRAVE that combines powerful computational analysis with the latest gene and sequencing technology to produce AAVs that can specifically target neurons.

To make AAVs neuron specific, the team selected 131 proteins known to specifically interact with synapses (the junctions between two nerve cells that allow them to communicate).

They then divided the proteins into small sequences, called peptides, and created a large library where each peptide could be identified by a specific pool of genetic barcodes (a short sequence of DNA that is unique and easily identified).

The peptide is then displayed on the surface of the AAV capsid, allowing researchers to test the simultaneous delivery of many cell-specific AAVs in a single experiment.

The team then injected these AAVs into the forebrain of adult rats and observed that around 13% of the peptides successfully homed to the brain. Moreover, 4% of the peptides were transported effectively through axons (long neuronal projections that conduct electrical impulses) toward the nerve cells body.

Researchers then selected 23 of these unique AAV capsids and injected them into rats striatum, a brain region involved in voluntary movement control and affected in Parkinsons disease. Twenty-one of the new AAV capsids had an improved transport capacity within nerve cells than in standard AAVs.

One particular capsid, called MNM008, showed a high affinity for rat dopaminergic neurons. Researchers then tested whether this viral vector also could target human dopaminergic neurons.

The team transplanted neurons generated from human embryonic stem cells into rats striatum. Six months later, they injected either MNM008 or a control AAV capsid and found that MNM008 was able to target these specific cells and be transported into dopaminergic neuronal cell bodies through axons.

Thanks to this technology, we can study millions of new virus variants in cell culture and animal models simultaneously. From this, we can subsequently create a computer simulation that constructs the most suitable virus shell for the chosen application in this case, the dopamine-producing nerve cells for the treatment of Parkinsons disease, Bjrklund said.

Overall, researchers believe the BRAVE method opens up the design and development of synthetic AAV vectors expressing capsid structures with unique properties and broad potential for clinical applications and brain connectivity studies.

The team has established a collaboration with a biotech company, Dyno Therapeutics, to use the BRAVE method in the design of new AAVs.

Together with researchers at Harvard University, we have established a new biotechnology company in Boston, Dyno Therapeutics, to further develop the virus engineering technology, using artificial intelligence, for future treatments, Bjrklund said.

Patricia holds a Ph.D. in Cell Biology from University Nova de Lisboa, and has served as an author on several research projects and fellowships, as well as major grant applications for European Agencies. She has also served as a PhD student research assistant at the Department of Microbiology & Immunology, Columbia University, New York.

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Ana holds a PhD in Immunology from the University of Lisbon and worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Instituto de Medicina Molecular (iMM) in Lisbon, Portugal. She graduated with a BSc in Genetics from the University of Newcastle and received a Masters in Biomolecular Archaeology from the University of Manchester, England. After leaving the lab to pursue a career in Science Communication, she served as the Director of Science Communication at iMM.

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New Gene Therapy Method May Open BRAVE New World in Parkinson's - Parkinson's News Today

5 Things to Know About Severe Combined Immunodeficiency – Yahoo Lifestyle

Severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) is a type of primary immunodeficiency, meaning some of the necessary parts to build a functioning immune system are either missing or not working in the body. It is the result of genetic mutations that primarily affect the T cells, and often at least one other type of immune cell. (1)The diagnosis is considered a pediatric emergency. Babies born with SCID typically only have a few years to live without any type of medical intervention or treatment to address their weakened immune system. (2)

According to various medical journals, the first case of SCID found in humans was reported in 1950. The first molecular cause of SCID (adenosine deaminase deficiency or ADA) was identified in 1972. (3)Reported clinical cases revealed babies with SCID were at an increased risk for developing infections that had the potential to become fatal without a functioning immune system to fight it.

As someone born before the diagnostic measures and transformational treatments available today, I consider myself lucky to have even received a clinical diagnosis at only 2 years old. My parents relentlessly pursued over 40 doctors within those two years to be able to put a name to what was causing my symptoms and failure to thrive.

Related: Why We Need to Keep Pushing Newborn Screening for SCID

To parents reading this: Im even luckier than I previously admitted. I was able to receive enzyme replacement therapy for SCID-ADA, which kept me alive until I took part in the first gene therapy trial in the world, at 4 years of age, in 1990, at the National Institutes of Health. I am forever indebted to my parents for being willing to take part in what was probably the most experimental and controversial clinical trial at the time, while still caring for two other kids with physical disabilities, and the doctors who chose to invest in rare disease research.

Within the past 30 years or so, particularly for X-linked and SCID-ADA, an enormous amount of progress has been made in attempting to identify, research and treat this rare syndrome. Currently, there are at least 13 different types of identified SCID, with various unknown types still being discovered. X-linked SCID (primarily affecting boys), is the most common form, representing about 40 percent of SCID cases. SCID-ADA is the second most prevalent type of SCID, identified in approximately 15 percent of cases. (4) (5)

Related: Why I'm Boycotting the Movie 'Everything, Everything'

The story of David Vetter, known as the Bubble Boy in the 70s and 80s, brought SCID to the forefront of the medical community and the world. Photos of him in his protective bubble, designed to act as a barrier between him and outside bacteria and germs, captivated the hearts and minds of all who followed his story. To SCID families, David is a hero and the epitome of strength and hope. Though his life was short-lived, his advocacy and help propelling research forward for SCID are etched in medical history forever. (6)

For those interested in SCID, here are five more facts you should know.

While SCID was previously thought to affect approximately one in 100,000 in the US. The advent and implementation of newborn screening have increased the prevalence to approximately one in 58,000 children diagnosed each year. (7)SCID cases are more frequently diagnosed in the Navajo, Amish and Mennonite communities. (8)

Related: When I Have to Convince Doctors to Treat Me Because I'm Rare

These include general failure to thrive, frequent ear and/or sinus infections, infections that dont improve with medicine, persistent skin rashes and/or infections, diarrhea, and yeast infections. Babies or children may exhibit some or all of these symptoms, but severe infections, whether in the bloodstream or lungs, like pneumonia, are most common. (9)

Because of the high mortality rate associated with SCID if left untreated, interventions have been necessary to ensure babies are diagnosed as soon as possible. Enter in newborn screening, a life-saving measure for many rare diseases, especially those that progress quickly after birth. Through tremendous patient advocacy efforts over the past 10 years, all states within the US now implement newborn screening for SCID, meaning babies can be diagnosed at birth, and given a greater chance to thrive and receive treatment early. (10)

Once children are diagnosed, the available options for treatment include a hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) with cells taken either from the bone marrow, peripheral or cord blood. Finding a matched donor can prove to be a significant obstacle for some families.

Another option, especially for those who are not able to find a matched donor, is gene therapy. This potential treatment has garnered a great deal of excitement and controversy in the news and the medical community. Within the past decade, many patients with SCID-ADA and X-linked SCID who have received the lentiviral gene therapy have thrived with some being able to even receive full vaccinations and wean off supportive treatments.

Although the current form of gene therapy for SCID is often touted as a potential cure, it is important for families to continue with follow-up with their doctors and specialists, as the long-term effects of gene therapy are still unknown. Patients with SCID who have not found successful treatment with HSCT and/or gene therapy often will require supplemental therapies, like enzyme replacement (common for SCID-ADA), or immunoglobulin infusions.(11)

There are no words to describe the gratitude for being born in a time where potential treatments are available for your particular rare disease, especially when only 5 percent of those diagnosed with a rare disease have an effective FDA-approved treatment on the market. (12)

It almost feels unimaginable to see life-changing treatments like gene therapy come full circle in my short 33 years of life. Still, as a patient advocate, I will always hesitate to use the word cure for treatments that are relatively new and still being perfected. While SCID families and patients are grateful for transformative therapies like gene therapy and HSCT, especially when the previous alternative was a shortened lifespan, we all need to continue to be diligent in our follow-up protocol with doctors, and keep an eye out for potential progression of the condition, should these treatments ever stop working.

Newborn screening campaigns, accessible HSCT treatment centers and centers for gene therapy across the globe are still needed so every child, regardless of where they are born, has a fair chance at receiving a diagnosis and treatment, and living life to their fullest potential.

The Isolation We Experience Because of My Daughter's Rare Disease, SCID

'Everything, Everything' Draws Criticism for Its Portrayal of SCID and Disability

The Problem I See With 'Everything, Everything' as a Mom to a Baby With SCID

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5 Things to Know About Severe Combined Immunodeficiency - Yahoo Lifestyle

Developing next-generation biologic pacemakers with stem cells – Health Europa

University of Houston associate professor of pharmacology Bradley McConnell is helping to develop new cardiac pacemakers by using stem cells found in fat, converting them to heart cells, and reprogramming those to act as biologic pacemaker cells.

The new biologic pacemaker-like cell will be useful as an alternative treatment for conduction system disorders, cardiac repair after a heart attack and to bridge the limitations of the electronic pacemaker.

The work was published in the Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology.

We are reprogramming the cardiac progenitor cell and guiding it to become a conducting cell of the heart to conduct electrical current, said McConnell.

McConnells collaborator, Robert J. Schwartz, Hugh Roy and Lillian Cranz Cullen Distinguished Professor of biology and biochemistry, previously reported work on turning the adipogenic mesenchymal stem cells, that reside in fat cells, into cardiac progenitor cells.

Now those same cardiac progenitor cells are being programmed to keep hearts beating as a sinoatrial node (SAN), part of the electrical cardiac conduction system (CCS).

The SAN is the primary pacemaker of the heart, responsible for generating the electric impulse or beat. Native cardiac pacemaker cells are confined within the SAN, a small structure comprised of just a few thousand specialised pacemaker cells. Failure of the SAN or a block at any point in the CCS results in arrhythmias.

More than 600,000 electronic pacemakers are implanted in patients annually to help control abnormal heart rhythms.

The small mechanical device is placed in the chest or abdomen and uses electrical pulses to prompt the heart to beat normally. In addition to having the device regularly examined by a physician, over time an electronic pacemaker can stop working properly.

McConnell said: Batteries will die. Just look at your smartphone.

This biologic pacemaker is better able to adapt to the body and would not have to be maintained by a physician. It is not a foreign object. It would be able to grow with the body and become much more responsive to what the body is doing.

To convert the cardiac progenitor cells, McConnell infused the cells with a unique cocktail of three transcription factors and a plasma membrane channel protein to reprogram the heart cells in vitro.

In our study, we observed that the SHOX2, HCN2, and TBX5 (SHT5) cocktail of transcription factors and channel protein reprogrammed the cells into pacemaker-like cells. The combination will facilitate the development of cell-based therapies for various cardiac conduction diseases, he reported.

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Developing next-generation biologic pacemakers with stem cells - Health Europa

Aspen Neuroscience Receives $6.5M for Parkinson’s Stem Cell Therapy – Parkinson’s News Today

Aspen Neuroscience, a new biotech company, has raised $6.5 million to develop cell therapies for Parkinsons disease using patients own cells.

The company was co-founded by renowned stem cell scientists Jeanne F. Loring, PhD, and Andres Bratt-Leal, PhD, and initially supported by Summit for Stem Cell, a non-profit organization that provides a variety of services for Parkinsons patients.

Parkinsons hallmark motor symptomsinclude tremor, slowness of movement (bradykinesia), stiffness (rigidity), uncontrollable movements (dyskinesia), and poor balance.

As the disease progresses, patients typically need to gradually increase their dopaminergic therapeutic dose for maximum benefit. Even after that they might sometimes experience reappearance or worsening of symptoms due to diminishing effects of dopaminergic therapy, known was off periods.

Importantly, dopaminergic therapy is delivered to areas of the brain other than the striatum, a key motor control region severely affected in Parkinsons disease. Because of the therapys off-target behavior, patients also may experience side effects such as hallucinations or cognitive impairment.

Aspen wants to combine its expertise in stem cell biology, genomics and neurology and develop the first autologous (self) stem cell-based therapy for Parkinsons disease.

In this type of cell therapy, a patients own cells (usually skin cells) are reprogrammed back into a stem cell-like state, which allows the development of an unlimited source of almost any type of human cell needed, including dopamine-producing neurons, which are those mainly affected by this disorder.

Because these cells are derived from patients, they do not carry the risk of being rejected once re-implanted, eliminating the need for immunosuppressive complementary therapies, which carry serious side effects such as infections and possibly limiting therapeutic potential.

In theory, replacing lost dopaminergic neurons with new stem cell-derived dopamine-producing ones could potentially ease or reverse motor symptoms associated with the disease.

Aspen is developing a restorative, disease modifying autologous neuron therapy for people suffering from Parkinsons disease, Howard J. Federoff, MD, PhD, Aspens CEO, said in a press release.

We are fortunate to have such a high-caliber scientific and medical leadership team to make our treatments a reality. Our cell replacement therapy, which originated in the laboratory of Dr. Jeanne Loring and was later supported by Summit for Stem Cell and its President, Ms. Jenifer Raub, has the potential to release dopamine and reconstruct neural networks where no disease-modifying therapies exist, Federoff said.

The companys lead product (ANPD001) is undergoing investigational new drug (IND)-enabling studies for the treatment of sporadic Parkinsons disease. Aspen experts also are developing a gene-editing treatment (ANPD002) for familial forms of Parkinsons, starting with the most common genetic variant in the GBAgene, which provides instructions to make the enzyme beta-glucocerebrosidase.

The new seed funding round was led by Domain Associates and Axon Ventures, with additional participation from Alexandria Venture Investments, Arch Venture Partners, OrbiMed and Section 32, according to the press release.

With over three years of experience in the medical communications business, Catarina holds a BSc. in Biomedical Sciences and a MSc. in Neurosciences. Apart from writing, she has been involved in patient-oriented translational and clinical research.

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Ana holds a PhD in Immunology from the University of Lisbon and worked as a postdoctoral researcher at Instituto de Medicina Molecular (iMM) in Lisbon, Portugal. She graduated with a BSc in Genetics from the University of Newcastle and received a Masters in Biomolecular Archaeology from the University of Manchester, England. After leaving the lab to pursue a career in Science Communication, she served as the Director of Science Communication at iMM.

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Aspen Neuroscience Receives $6.5M for Parkinson's Stem Cell Therapy - Parkinson's News Today

BioRestorative Therapies Featured in IEEE Pulse Magazine’s Cover Story About Stem Cell Therapies for Low Back Pain – GlobeNewswire

MELVILLE, N.Y., Dec. 16, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- BioRestorative Therapies, Inc. (BioRestorative or the Company) (OTC: BRTX), a life sciences company focused on stem cell-based therapies, announced today feature coverage in the news outlet, IEEE Pulse, a magazine of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. According to IEEE, it is the worlds largest technical professional organization for the advancement of technology.

To view the IEEE Pulse Magazines article featuring BioRestorative, click here.

The published cover-story article features commentary from Francisco Silva, Chief Scientist and Vice President of Research and Development for BioRestorative, regarding BRTX-100, the Companys lead therapeutic candidate for chronic lumbar disc disease. Once the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorizes the sale of BRTX-100, we would ship it to your doctor, and with a 30-minute procedure the material would be injected into your disc in a 1.5 ml solution, explains Silva. He elaborates on the product, discussing growing and expanding stem cells from the patients bone marrow under hypoxic conditions that mimic those in the normal intervertebral space. We are enriching the cells to be able to survive in this harsh environment, says Silva.

In addition to BRTX-100, the magazine article also highlights BioRestoratives other research pursuit, its ThermoStem program, utilizing brown adipose (fat) derived stem cells to target treatment of metabolic diseases and disorders, like diabetes, obesity and hypertension.

About BioRestorative Therapies, Inc.

BioRestorative Therapies, Inc. (www.biorestorative.com) develops therapeutic products using cell and tissue protocols, primarily involving adult stem cells. Our two core programs, as described below, relate to the treatment of disc/spine disease and metabolic disorders:

Disc/Spine Program (brtxDISC): Our lead cell therapy candidate, BRTX-100, is a product formulated from autologous (or a persons own) cultured mesenchymal stem cells collected from the patients bone marrow. We intend that the product will be used for the non-surgical treatment of painful lumbosacral disc disorders. The BRTX-100 production process utilizes proprietary technology and involves collecting a patients bone marrow, isolating and culturing stem cells from the bone marrow and cryopreserving the cells. In an outpatient procedure, BRTX-100 is to be injected by a physician into the patients damaged disc. The treatment is intended for patients whose pain has not been alleviated by non-invasive procedures and who potentially face the prospect of surgery. We have received authorization from the Food and Drug Administration to commence a Phase 2 clinical trial using BRTX-100 to treat persistent lower back pain due to painful degenerative discs.

Metabolic Program (ThermoStem): We are developing a cell-based therapy to target obesity and metabolic disorders using brown adipose (fat) derived stem cells to generate brown adipose tissue (BAT). BAT is intended to mimic naturally occurring brown adipose depots that regulate metabolic homeostasis in humans. Initial preclinical research indicates that increased amounts of brown fat in the body may be responsible for additional caloric burning as well as reduced glucose and lipid levels. Researchers have found that people with higher levels of brown fat may have a reduced risk for obesity and diabetes.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and such forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. You are cautioned that such statements are subject to a multitude of risks and uncertainties that could cause future circumstances, events or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements as a result of various factors and other risks, including, without limitation, whether the Company will be able to consummate the private placement and the satisfaction of closing conditions related to the private placement and those set forth in the Company's Form 10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. You should consider these factors in evaluating the forward-looking statements included herein, and not place undue reliance on such statements. The forward-looking statements in this release are made as of the date hereof and the Company undertakes no obligation to update such statements.

CONTACT:Email: ir@biorestorative.com

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BioRestorative Therapies Featured in IEEE Pulse Magazine's Cover Story About Stem Cell Therapies for Low Back Pain - GlobeNewswire