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December 2, 2009

New stem cell lines approved for tax-paid research
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP MEDICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON -- Scientists can start using taxpayer dollars to do research 
with 13 batches of embryonic stem cells and the government says dozens more 
cell lines should be available soon, opening a new era for the potentially 
life-saving field.
President Barack Obama lifted eight years of restrictions on these master 
cells last spring. But $21 million-and-counting in new projects were on hold 
until the National Institutes of Health determined which of hundreds of 
existing stem cell lines were ethically appropriate to use.

"This is the first down payment," Dr. Francis Collins, NIH's director, said 
Wednesday as he opened a master registry. "People are champing at the bit 
for the opportunity to get started."

Thirteen stem cell lines - created by Children's Hospital Boston and 
Rockefeller University - are first on that list. Another 96 embryonic stem 
cell lines are undergoing NIH review, and 20 or more could get a decision by 
Friday, Collins said.

And researchers have notified the NIH that they may apply for approval of 
another 250 stem cell lines.

"The field has been waiting with bated breath for this announcement," said 
Dr. George Daley of Children's Hospital Boston, whose lab created 11 of the 
newly approved lines. He has about 100 vials of cells from each batch 
already banked and ready to ship to researchers around the country.

The numbers mark a big change from the Bush administration, which had 
limited taxpayer-funded research to about 21 stem cell lines, those already 
in existence as of August 2001. Scientists say newer batches were created in 
ways that made them far better candidates for successful research. Indeed, 
only one of the Bush-era stem cell lines is among the 96 now under 
consideration.

Wednesday's announcement means that researchers who were awarded $21 million 
in stem cell research grants earlier this year can start using the approved 
lines immediately, projects that include work to one day repair damaged 
heart tissue and grow new brain cells. Millions more in stem cell money is 
due out later this winter, funds from the economic stimulus package.

Embryonic stem cells can morph into any cell of the body, and scientists 
hope to harness them so they can create replacement tissue to treat, 
possibly even cure, a variety of diseases, from diabetes to Parkinson's to 
spinal cord injury.

Culling those cells destroys a days-old embryo, something many strongly 
oppose on moral grounds. But once created, the cells can propagate 
indefinitely in lab dishes.

Federal law forbids using taxpayer money to create or destroy an embryo. All 
the stem cell lines involved in Wednesday's announcement were created from 
fertility clinic leftovers - embryos that otherwise would have been thrown 
away - using private money. NIH is reviewing the rest to see if they also 
meet ethics requirements for use in taxpayer-funded health research. Among 
the requirements: That the woman or couple who donated the original embryo 
did so voluntarily and were told of other options, such as donating to 
another infertile woman.

Why do scientists need so many choices? It's not just to supply the demand 
of a growing field. There's a lot of variability from batch to batch in how 
the stem cells perform, Daley said. Some are better at turning into 
blood-producing cells than muscle-producing ones, for instance.
It has to do with the genetics of the original embryo, and probably also 
with the recipe used to create and nurture the stem cells - an environment 
that can trigger genes to switch on and off at different times, explained 
Daley, who has government funding to study those important differences.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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