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Scientists Urge Embryonic Stem Cell Research; Despite New Technique Creating
Embryonic-Like Stem Cells
Article Date: 08 Jan 2008 - 10:00 PST

 Although some experts "hailed" the November 2007 announcement that
scientists in Japan and Wisconsin had "reprogrammed" mature adult human skin
cells to produce embryonic-like stem cells that might eventually be
converted into heart, nerve or other tissue as the "solution" to the U.S.
debate over human embryonic stem cell research, private groups and state
agencies that fund such research "see no reason to abandon their work," the
Wall Street Journal reports.

Facilities that conduct embryonic stem cell research could be in even higher
demand, according to Kevin Eggan, a stem cell biologist at Harvard
University. Eggan believes that more research is needed on embryonic stem
cells because the cells produced by the new technique are "genetically
changed in a way that should make us worried about using them in animals or
people or to model diseases." He added that embryonic stem cells "will be
better" than the reprogrammed cells "even if they are more complicated
politically" until the new technique is considered safe and stable enough
for clinical trials.

According to the Journal, private donors have contributed more than $190
million to groups conducting research using embryonic stem cells. In
addition, several states -- including California, Connecticut, Illinois,
Maryland and New York -- are funding research using embryonic stem cells,
the Journal reports. Richard Murphy, president of the California Institute
for Regenerative Medicine, said CIRM still considers embryonic stem cells to
be the "gold standard" in stem cell research. However, CIRM in an effort to
"sort out the realities" plans to award $13 million in grants for research
that does not destroy human embryos, Murphy said (Hotz, Wall Street Journal,
1/4).

Reprinted with kind permission from http://www.nationalpartnership.org.
© 2007 The Advisory Board Company. All rights reserved.

Rayilyn Brown
Board Member AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's Foundation
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