Stem Cell Pioneers
Despite federal opposition to embryonic stem cell research, the promise of medical benefits, academic freedom and profits in California is luring scientists to the field
- By Jon Cohen
- Photographs by Mark Richards
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2005, Subscribe
As Irving Weissman drives past Cannery Row in Monterey, California, in a light rain, he waves an open palm like an impresario, showing off the picturesque bay and craggy coastline. "Spectacular," Weissman says as he pulls onto the grounds of the Hopkins Marine Station. He's a distinguished immunologist, best known for his studies of blood cells, but he's also a straight-shooting Montana native who sports the type of rugged beard you might expect on a fur trader, his father's profession. When he sees David Epel walking by, Weissman stops his black Lexus sedan and lowers a window.
"How can you sleep at night?" asks Epel, a marine biologist who investigates fertilization in sea urchins.
"Nobody can," smiles Weissman.
Epel and Weissman are marveling over the decision made by the voters of California in November 2004 to spend up to $3 billion in the state over the next ten years on human embryonic stem cell research. Known as Proposition 71, the initiative has created a gold rush fever that's caught the attention of stem cell scientists everywhere. Many prospectors envision rewards well beyond dollars: new treatments and possibly cures for a wide array of medical conditions, such as Alzheimer's, diabetes, Parkinson's, osteoporosis, multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury, cancer and heart disease.
Passage of the stem cell referendum sent a blaring signal to Washington. President Bush, backed by leading Republicans in Congress who share his beliefs that a human embryo has the same moral rights as a person, has strictly limited the use of federal funds to pursue this avenue of scientific inquiry. One bill in the U.S. Senate even proposes to criminalize what Weissman and others see as the single most promising aspect of the research—the ability to use an ailing patient's own cells to develop treatments. So Prop. 71, which was supported by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, and garnered a whopping 59 percent of the vote, is almost a declaration of secession. And New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Wisconsin and several other states have proposed similar legislation to fund stem cell research within their own borders. Even so, some stem cell scientists in the United States worry that they are falling behind their colleagues in other countries.
Weissman, who has a small lab at the Hopkins Marine Station and a much larger one 90 miles away at its parent institution, Stanford University, played a starring role in the Prop. 71 campaign. He helped shape the proposition and attracted crucial funding for it, meeting privately with politicians, influential Hollywood producers and other deep-pocketed supporters including Bill Gates. Weissman also became a go-to expert for the news media and even starred in a TV ad for the "Yes on 71" campaign. He has taken up the cause before the U.S. Congress, President Bush's Council on Bioethics and the late Pope John Paul II, warning at every turn that limiting or blocking stem cell research would hamper development of potential treatments and cures—a moral dilemma of its own.
The stem cell frontier provokes some of the most contentious questions in society: When does life begin? Should religious belief play a role in shaping laws and regulations? How much should governments limit research? Does the fate of an embryo matter as much as the health of a living person?
Weissman stumbled into the issue in 2001 when he chaired a National Academies panel on cloning, a scientific technology that overlaps with stem cell biology. While Weissman abhors the idea of cloning humans—and the panel he chaired called for a legally enforceable ban of the procedure—he saw that using cloning technology to derive embryonic stem cells opened a new world of medical possibilities. That's when he decided to champion the idea. "I didn't choose this position, I promise you," he says. And though Weissman pioneered the discovery of stem cells in adults, his academic labs and the three biotechnology companies he co-founded, SyStemix, Inc., StemCells, Inc. and Cellerant Therapeutics, Inc., do not yet work on human embryonic stem cells. As he likes to half joke: "My advocacy of human embryonic stem cell research is in fact probably felt by my companies to be competitive to their interests."
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Comments (1)
It seems that the particle physics of stem cells is indicative of seeming variant electrons, within a biological organism, having a, near nano electromagnetic charge, is what is influencing an adult stem cell, placed in a nucleic emptied egg, signaling it to become an embryonic stem cell.
Inquiry; Is it a fact that the dermis stem cell used to grow the heart, as was done in Japan, first became an embryonic stem cell, and did not know to grow the heart until tissue from the heart was what was influencing the direction of the stem cell growth? Thus, meaning, the electromagnetic signals coming from the near-by tissue cells nucleus (which means we'd have to reclassify variant electrons and studying how the magnetic signal might transfer from one electron to another) directs stem cell growth? Many medical stem cell treatments may just mean the stimulation of an existing healthy organ stem cell during its renewal/replacement stage, wouldn't it? (EG.; an only 1/2 dead pancreas) The splitting of a non-extracted stem cell would also direct the extra stem cells placement, thus, regrowing said pancreas. How would a person be able to find out participants of an experiment; EG.; an Endocrinologist MD, Dr. of Particle Physics, Cellular Biologist MD, and the scientist team at NASA that transfers mathematics properly for computations to 10E78 relative to .01E-78? Has a team like this been comprised?
I ask for any discussion of the above, and thank you for your time.
Posted by Douglas Thompson on February 1,2010 | 07:09 PM