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dysaysallstemcelllinestainted
http://www.salk.edu/news/releases/details.php?id=115 from yahoo news
today & LA Times
Study Says All Stem Cell Lines Tainted
2 hours, 38 minutes ago Top Stories - Los Angeles Times
By Karen Kaplan Times Staff Writer
All human embryonic stem cell lines approved for use in federally funded
research are contaminated with a foreign molecule from mice that may make
them risky for use in medical therapies, according to a study released
Sunday. Researchers at UC San Diego and the Salk Institute for
Biological Studies in La Jolla report that if the stem cells are transplanted
into people, the cells could provoke an immune system attack that would wipe
out their ability to deliver cures for diseases such as Parkinson's,
Alzheimer's and diabetes.
The finding is a setback to the Bush administration's controversial policy
that provides federal funding only for research using embryonic stem cell
lines that were created before August 2001. Evidence that all such lines are
contaminated supports long-standing concerns among researchers that the lines
eligible for federal money are insufficient to propel research forward. The
scientists who wrote the study say it could take at least a year or two — if
it is possible at all — to find a way to salvage the stem cells by wiping
them clean of the mouse molecules. "We don't know, but I'm trying to be
optimistic," said Fred H. Gage, a professor of genetics at the Salk Institute
who co-wrote the paper in the current issue of Nature Medicine.
The researchers said the safest course was to create fresh batches of stem
cells that were free of contamination from animal molecules — a process that
could also take years. The need to develop new, uncontaminated
embryonic stem cell lines would bolster the influence of the California
Institute for Regenerative Medicine, a $3-billion funding agency established
by state voters in November to circumvent President Bush (news - web sites)'s
restrictions.
"This is why Prop. 71 is so important," Susan Fisher, a UC San Francisco
professor of cell and tissue biology, said of California's stem cell research
measure. "We will be able to do this basic research to be able to really
produce a strong foundation on which this work can continue." The new state
agency allows the creation of new stem cell lines and will fund about $300
million a year in embryonic stem cell research for the next decade — more
than 10 times the yearly spending at the federal level. The initiative
marks the largest state investment in basic scientific research, an area
traditionally funded by the National Institutes of Health (news - web sites).
The stem cell lines allowed under Bush's policy came from embryos donated by
couples who no longer needed them for in vitro fertilization. In his 2001
address, Bush said: "This allows us to explore the promise and potential of
stem cell research without crossing a fundamental moral line."
From the start, however, researchers questioned the viability of the
Bush-approved stem cell lines. The president said more than 60 such lines
existed worldwide. About 20 lines proved usable, although concerns persisted
about the techniques that had been used to create and keep them alive.
When the stem cells were first isolated, they were grown in petri dishes
lined with cells from mice and bathed in blood serum from calves and other
animals. The animal material was used to encourage the stem cells to multiply
while preserving their unusual ability to mature into any kind of human cell.
This "pluripotency" is why embryonic stem cells have been so promising for
both researchers and patients. For example, doctors could treat patients with
juvenile diabetes by growing replacements for islet cells that fail to make
insulin. Researchers have suspected that exposing the stem cells to animal
products could have contaminated them with viruses, proteins or other
molecules that could be dangerous to people. Now they have evidence it did.
According to the study, human stem cells have incorporated a type of sialic
acid that is common in many mammals but isn't produced by people. Potential
contamination of the lines was discussed by Gage in October when he spoke to
a National Academy of Sciences (news - web sites) panel drawing up ethical
guidelines for such research. When the acid, Neu5Gc, enters the human body —
typically by eating meat or drinking milk — antibodies rush to attack it.
Dr. Ajit Varki, a professor in UC San Diego's department of cellular and
molecular medicine, questioned whether stem cells containing the acid would
also be vulnerable to attack if transplanted into humans. He and his
colleagues exposed the stem cells to human blood serum that contained Neu5Gc
antibodies. "It kills the cells," said Varki, one of the authors of the
study. "It's reasonable to assume the same thing would happen inside people."
The most straightforward solution would be to start again with new stem cell
lines.
"If none of these funding issues and legal issues and ethical and moral
issues existed, then it would make sense to start over," Varki said. But to
develop new lines, scientists must destroy 5-day-old embryos. Some religious
leaders, social conservatives and others oppose the practice, saying it is
tantamount to murder. Bush's research restrictions have come under sharp
attack from high-profile figures including former First Lady Nancy Reagan and
actors Christopher Reeve, who died in October, and Michael J. Fox. The issue
took center stage in last year's presidential campaign, and although Bush won
reelection, advocates scored a victory with the passage of California's
Proposition 71.
Since then, lawmakers in several other states, including Wisconsin, New York
and New Jersey, have announced major funding proposals in part to keep top
researchers and scientists from going to California. Even before the influx
of money from states, many leading researchers chose to forgo federal
funding, instead getting private grants that allowed them to create new
embryonic stem cell lines. Fisher said the other strategy of cleansing
existing stem cells of the mouse acid might solve the immediate problem. But
there is still the possibility that there are other animal molecules that
could alter the cells and make them unsuitable for human use.
"Many people have been very uncomfortable with the derivation of human cell
lines using mouse [cells] and animal proteins," said Fisher, who was not
involved with the research published Sunday. "This is like being able to put
your finger on why you're paranoid."
Times staff writer Megan Garvey contributed to this report.
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