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In a message dated 10/07/2007 07:01:06 GMT Standard Time,  [log in to unmask]
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Cloning  pioneer Alan Colman to lead Singapore stem cell institute

Bloomberg  NewsPublished: July 9, 2007
SINGAPORE: Alan Colman, the scientist who  helped clone Dolly the sheep more
than a decade ago, said he would return  to a laboratory-based role as the
head of a Singapore government body  responsible for stem cell research.
Colman started work last week as  executive director of the Singapore Stem
Cell Consortium and principal  investigator at the Institute of Medical
Biology. Colman was previously  chief executive officer of ES Cell
International, a Singapore-based stem  cell company. His new positions will
give him more time in the laboratory,  he said.
"I'll be dealing with all sorts of stem cells, not just human  embryonic,"
Colman said in a telephone interview on Monday.
Singapore is  trying to establish itself as a global hub for biomedical
research by  offering incentives to lure scientists like Colman, who moved to
Singapore  from Britain five years ago, and companies including Novartis  and
GlaxoSmithKline. Singapore wants to cut its reliance on electronics  as
manufacturers shift jobs to lower-cost countries.
The island nation  is competing with Australia and other countries for
leading scientists. The  University of Queensland in Australia said Monday
that it had appointed  Nicholas Fisk, an expert on fetal stem cell therapy
currently based at  Imperial College in Britain, to lead its new center for
clinical research  in Brisbane.
Singapore's government has invested more than 500 million  Singapore dollars,
or $329 million, in a seven-building science park,  called Biopolis, where
Colman works. Production of drugs and medical  devices has quadrupled to 23
billion dollars since the government  identified biomedical science as a
driver of economic growth in  2000.
Compared with the United States, where President George W. Bush  has
restricted some federal funding for stem cell research, Singapore's  more
liberal laws allow researchers to take stem cells from aborted fetuses  or
discarded embryos, clone them and keep them for as long as 14  days.
Singapore this year was named one of five key locations for  biotechnology
research by Fierce Biotech, a U.S.-based industry journal.  The four other
locations are Scotland and the U.S. states of California,  Florida and
Washington.
Colman was part of a team of scientists at  Scotland's Roslin Institute and
helped create Dolly the sheep, the world's  first cloned animal, in 1996. He
worked for 14 years as research director  of PPL Therapeutics in Britain
before joining ES Cell International in  2002.
Colman will continue on the board of ES Cell, which will remain as a  smaller
entity focused on "more immediate revenue-generating activities  like drug
screening and drug discovery," he said.
ES Cell began in 2002  as a joint venture between Singapore's Economic
Development Board and an  Australia-based private investment group. The board
has since become the  company's majority owner, Colman said.

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member  AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's  Foundation
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How do they know they're getting the original Alan and not a copy ?   :)






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