I don't have the reference at hand but the discovery of the CML stem cell lines 
some months ago was a big step forward for research in CML and the launch of 
the facilities should cause some things to move forward in the future. 

Rob

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Carl Davies 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, March 16, 2005 6:36 PM
  Subject: [CMLHope] Pioneer Gleevec Researcher to Head Stem Cell Institute


  I have always maintained that government funding of embryonic and adult stem 
cell research will benefit CML'ers in the future.

  As a result of an California initiative to fund this vital research, UCLA is 
launching a stem cell institute to be headed by Dr. Owen Witte, a pioneer 
Gleevec researcher.

  Here is the article:


  UCLA launches $20 million stem cell institute to investigate HIV, 
  cancer and neurological disorders 

  Experts in bioengineering, imaging, molecular genetics, immunology, 
  ethics, hematology/oncology and cellular biology to collaborate on 
  Proposition 71 research 

  Drawing together experts from fields as diverse as engineering to 
  molecular biology, UCLA officials announced March 16 the formation 
  of the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Medicine to conduct 
  embryonic and adult stem cell research that may lead to better 
  treatments for HIV, cancer and neurological disorders. 

  "As one of the world's leading research universities, UCLA has long 
  been engaged in adult and embryonic stem cell research with 
  activities in areas ranging from the AIDS Institute to the Brain 
  Research Institute to the UCLA College," said UCLA Chancellor Albert 
  Carnesale. "The new UCLA Institute for ! Stem Cell Biology and 
  Medicine will enable us to continue fostering such interdisciplinary 
  collaborations and to build upon the existing body of knowledge for 
  the benefit of people worldwide." 

  UCLA will provide $20 million over five years to launch the 
  campuswide institute, which will enable teams of researchers to 
  compete for state grants created by the passage of Proposition 71. 
  The money will pay for recruitment for a dozen new faculty 
  positions, salaries and expansion of highly sophisticated laboratory 
  space, infrastructure, and supplies. 

  Dr. Owen Witte, a renowned scientist whose laboratory research laid 
  the groundwork for development of the targeted leukemia therapy 
  Gleevec, is director of the new institute. He also stressed the 
  interdisciplinary approach necessary to face the challenges related 
  to stem cell research. "Embryonic stem cells have the power to 
  develop into every type of human tissue," said Witte, ! who also is a 
  professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics, and a 
  Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. "If we can learn how 
  they are regulated for growth and development, we can harness this 
  knowledge to study tissue development and regeneration and 
  potentially come up with new ways to fight many life-threatening 
  diseases." 

  Researchers are hopeful that stem cell research will lead to 
  revolutionary new treatments for Parkinson's, spinal cord injuries, 
  Alzheimer's, cancer and other diseases, and perhaps shed new light 
  on how some diseases develop. However, most scientists agree that 
  human treatments are years or even decades away. 

  Proposition 71, passed by 59 percent of California voters in 
  November, will provide $3 billion for stem cell research. A state 
  institute is being created in Northern California to allocate 
  funding to stem cell scientists at universities, medical schools and 
  resea! rch facilities. Grant applications will be available in May. A 
  29-member oversight and governing board will oversee the institute 
  and review requests for funding. 

  "With the launch of this institute, we realize our goal of bringing 
  together scientific, ethical, legal and policy experts from across 
  the UCLA campus to focus on the great promise of stem cell 
  research," said Dr. Gerald S. Levey, vice chancellor for medical 
  sciences and dean of the David Geffen School of Medicine. "As dean, 
  I am committed to advancing the full potential of stem cell research 
  to find novel and more effective therapies to treat many diseases 
  for which present-day therapy is either unsatisfactory or 
  unavailable." 

  Because the university and medical school at UCLA are located on the 
  same campus, researchers are well positioned to compete for stem 
  cell grant funding, Witte said. UCLA researchers have proven their 
  skill at ushering scientif! ic discoveries from the lab to modern 
  medicine. Several targeted therapies were developed based on UCLA 
  research, including Gleevec and the breast cancer drug Herceptin. 
  Additionally, UCLA scientists played key roles in testing the 
  targeted therapies Avastin and Tarceva. 

  UCLA also is the only public university in California to boast a 
  sophisticated Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) suite, a specialized 
  laboratory that is critical for the safe growth and manipulation of 
  stem cell lines. Compliance officers oversee all research in the GMP 
  suite, which must follow stringent federal guidelines for 
  reintroduction of manipulated cells into the human body. 

  In addition, UCLA's Jonsson Cancer Center features an established 
  clinical trials infrastructure that could be used to test new 
  therapeutics that may develop as a result of the stem cell studies, 
  said Judith C. Gasson, cancer center director, stem cell institute 
  co-director, and a professor of medicine and biological chemistry. 

  "I see cancer and stem cells as tightly linked," Gasson said. "More 
  and more evidence suggests that cancer is a stem cell disease. Many 
  of our current therapies are not effective because they don't target 
  the cancer stem cells. Our experience with gene medicine and the GMP 
  facilities will make it easier for us to translate our basic stem 
  cell research into human therapies by using facilities and 
  procedures already in place." 

  The UCLA Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Medicine will focus its 
  embryonic and adult stem cell research in three areas: 


  HIV: UCLA scientists are exploring how the AIDS virus blocks stem 
  cell function, as well as stem cell approaches to combating HIV 
  disease. One potential therapeutic example includes inserting 
  antiviral genes into blood-forming stem cells and reintroducing them 
  into the body. As these blood c! ells develop, the gene protects the 
  mature cell against HIV infection. The UCLA AIDS Institute already 
  has completed a Phase I clinical trial using adult stem cells. 
  Embryonic stem cells also could be engineered for this strategy to 
  avoid the need for isolating patients' cells, ease transplantation 
  and increase clinical usefulness. 

  Cancer: Research will seek to shed more light on cancer stem cells 
  and how they develop. Not much is known about cancer stem cells and 
  new findings may lead to therapies that target cell signaling 
  pathways specific for cancer stem cells. These therapies hone in on 
  what is broken in a cancer cell while leaving the healthy tissue 
  intact. Several Jonsson Cancer Center researchers already are doing 
  stem cell research in laboratories, and that work will be folded 
  into the institute. 

  Neurological disorders: UCLA researchers are studying many aspects 
  of the roles that stem cells may play in ! healing neurological 
  disorders, including stroke, spinal cord injury, brain tumors, 
  multiple sclerosis and genetic diseases. Future studies will include 
  investigation of stem cell biology and development, as well as 
  therapeutic based research using adult and embryonic stem cells. 
  The Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Medicine is a collaboration 
  of the David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA's Jonsson Cancer 
  Center, the Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science, 
  and the UCLA College. Each collaborator brings leading-edge 
  technologies to the table: integrated microfluidics to aid in cell 
  isolation, microarrays and shape encoded particle approaches for 
  gene _expression analysis, proteomics using advanced mass 
  spectroscopy, large-scale computational facilities for 
  bioinformatics, and world-class multi modality imaging facilities 
  for analysis of stem cell therapies in laboratory models and, 
  ultimately, in patients! enrolled in clinical trials. 

  "UCLA encourages strong collaborations between faculty in the life 
  sciences and the health sciences," said Patricia O'Brien, executive 
  dean of the UCLA College. "As biomedicine grows increasingly 
  complex, new academic partnerships hold the key to discovery; this 
  institute will create novel opportunities for research that spans 
  many disciplines." 






   


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