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
(Page 3 of 7)
Embryonic stem cell research is entangled with the issue of abortion in myriad ways, and indeed the Bush administration's position has roots in the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that made abortion legal in the United States. Worried that scientists might use aborted embryos or fetuses for research, Congress in 1974 passed a "temporary moratorium"on the federal funding of any such work. Subsequent legislation extended this ban to the creation of embryos. With the breakthroughs in stem cell research in the late 1990s, Weissman and many other scientists urged Congressto reconsider this sweeping ban. Then, on August 9, 2001, President Bush gave a speech on national televisionfrom his Texas ranch that focused on stem cell research, describing a new policy that attempted to please people on both sides of the issue.
Bush declared that researchers who used federal funds could work on human embryonic stem cell lines that scientists had already created but could not make any new ones. Bush, who characterized the issue as "one of the most profound of our time," said that he was worried "about a culture that devalues life" and said that he had arrived at this compromise after "prayer and considerable reflection." About two dozen stem cell lines meet his criteria for federal funding.
Most embryonic stem cell lines, including the federally approved lines from Wisconsin, are derived from embryos donated by patients at in vitro fertilization clinics. Many couples undergoing IVF treatment, which fails about 70 percent of the time, create more embryos than can be implanted in a given treatment session, and they freeze the "excess" ones for possible future use. (A2003 study estimated that assisted reproduction clinics in the United States stored about 400,000 frozen embryos, an untold number of which will ultimately be destroyed.) Stem cell scientists working with donated embryos typically extract cells from the embryo when it is 3 to 5 days old and about the size of the period at the end of this sentence, and discard the rest. The researchers do not culture any cells that are programmed to turn into a placenta. That's one reason an embryonic stem cell line can't develop into a baby. Congress, with support from key Republicans such as Bill Frist and Orrin Hatch, appears likely to pass a bill next year that would allow researchers to create new lines with donated, excess embryos, but President Bush has vowed to veto it.
Critics say that the federal regulations on embryonic stem cell research have relegated the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), which has bankrolled research on everything from cancer and heart disease to diabetes and AIDS, to bit-player status in the stem cell field. Singapore, the United Kingdom, Australia, Israel and China, they contend, have rushed to fill the vacuum by funding their own scientists. South Korean scientists, to the surprise of many, were the first to create human embryonic stem cell lines using cloning—the highly anticipated first step toward developing personalized stem cell therapies.
Cell biologist Larry Goldstein of the University of California at San Diego, who worked closely with Weissman on the Prop. 71 campaign, started his first project with human embryonic stem cells in the summer of 2004. The research takes place in a small room that discreetly has no indication of what goes on inside.
Incubators in the room hold federally approved embryonic stem cell lines, one of which came from the Wisconsin researchers, and others made since August 9, 2001, by groups not using NIH funds. Little round red and green stickers dot all of the boxes on the shelves to indicate whether supplies were purchased with federal money, because strict penalties would be imposed if ever a researcher grew nonfederally approved cells using a petri dish that NIH paid for.
Goldstein wants to use his stem cell lines to study Alzheimer's disease. He plans to splice genes that are known to cause a rare type of inherited Alzheimer's into the cultured cells, and then test different hypotheses about what causes the disease. If a clear mechanism emerges, researchers may use the cell lines to screen various experimental drugs, to see which ones prevent the cells from developing characteristic signs of Alzheimer's disease. This use of embryonic stem cell lines "has been a completely underemphasized part of the discussion," he says.
For now, though, Goldstein's lab simply wants to figure out which lines grow best in which cell-feeding broths, which have odd-sounding names like Modified Eagle Serum and Leukemia Inhibitory Factor. "We're at the very, very beginning stages," says Nikole Kimes.
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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