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 4 of 7)
Kimes snaps on a pair of latex gloves and sprays her hands with disinfectant. She removes a clear, plastic petri dish from an incubator that's about the size of a dorm room fridge. The incubator is set at 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit—human body temperature. Kimes moves to a lab bench that's covered by a ventilation hood, and she slides the petri dish under the lens of a microscope. The magnified cells look like the tiny bubbles that cluster at the bottom of a pot of water just before it begins to a boil. Mouse connective tissue, which forms a platform for the cells to grow on, resembles long grains of rice.
Normal embryos take on a mulberry shape as they grow. Although initially there's a symmetry to the bubbles in the petri dish, they do not look like a mulberry, nor will they ever take on that shapeas they grow. For one thing, they lack placental cells that help form early embryos. As a normal embryo grows, its cells also change shape as they lose their "stemness"and commit themselves to becoming, say, muscle, liver or bone cells. Kimes, however, is doing everything she can to keep the embryonic stem cells in a state of perpetual bachelorhood in which they make no commitments.
Kimes picks up an instrument that resembles a toy gun with a foot-long glass straw, called a pipette, attached to it. She gently maneuvers the tip of the pipette into the petri dish, and when she pulls a trigger, dead cells and fluid rush up into the pipette. The back end of the instrument has a plastic tube that leads to a large flask that collects the detritus. She replaces the pipette with a fresh one that she takes from a box with a green dot—these are nonfederally approved cells—and then uses it to slowly add fresh medium, the color of pale cranberry juice, to the dish. She then slips the dish back into the incubator. She will do this again and again, most every day of the week, sometimes removing samples of cells to see if their chromosomes have become mutated.
Kimes and Goldstein still don't know which media best support the growth of these cells and yet prevent them from turning into a specific type of cell. These particular cells seem to like a cocktail that she concocts from certain serums, amino acids, growth factors and antibiotics. And in her more ambitious experiments, she changes the cocktail's ingredients to compel the cells to turn into neurons. (She finally succeeds after several months of tinkering.) The Goldstein lab has not begun to make its own cell lines from excess embryos or to make human lines using cloning technology. "We're just figuring out how to do this," Kimes says with a laugh. "We'll have our hands full for a while."
Given the dramatically polarized perspectives that proponents and opponents have of this research, the Goldstein lab's work with human embryonic stem cells is oddly mundane. Goldstein says the passage of Prop. 71 should speed the time it takes to answer nuts-and-bolts questions about how to manipulate embryonic stem cells in a lab. "Science moves quickly when lots of people work with a new technology," says Goldstein. "Lots of different tricks get worked out, little secrets get shared, lore gets passed around."
Robert Klein is a California real estate developer and lawyer who has movie star good looks and a winning smile. Klein, who worked on the legislation's language and the financing of Prop. 71 with bonds, became involved in the issue partly because his 15-year-old son has diabetes.
Prop. 71, among other things, provides funds for a new state agency, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. Its governing board will award grants to scientists based on the quality of their research proposals, which will be evaluated by other scientists. In September, the institute, headquartered in San Francisco, announced that its first grants will train scientists and clinicians in stem cell biology and attendant ethical and legal issues. The institute plans to fund stem cell research that is done within the state's borders, "has the greatest potential for therapies and cures" and is "unlikely" to receive federal support. For now, however, lawsuits filed by opponents of Prop. 71 are holding up the distribution of money.
Klein, who heads a commission that oversees the new institute, says Prop. 71 will ultimately see up to a 236 percent return on its $3 billion investment. Klein gets his numbers from an analysis prepared by economic consultants during the campaign. The analysis predicts that new treatments will lead to healthcare savings, and that state coffers will enjoy revenues from taxes paid by biotech companies that flock to the field, as well as from a scheme that shares royalties if discoveries made with Prop. 71 funds come to market. This sunny forecast assumes that stem cell research will lead to medical advances for six diseases within 15 years—a promise that no one, of course, can make. Even the cheeriest prognosticators suggest it will take at least five years before any medicine based on human embryonic stem cell research proves to be safe and effective. And while $3 billion may seem like a huge budget, it has to last ten years and pay for both basic research and costly clinical trials.
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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