Title: Stem Cells in Science and Medicine
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2Enabling Stem Cell Research in California
- Gil Sambrano, Ph.D.
- California Institute for Regenerative Medicine
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4What is a stem cell?
1. Mature/specialize 2. Self-renew
5Stem Cell Capacity
6Stem Cell Capacity
Human embryonic stem cell lines were first
derived in 1998 by Dr. James Thompson.
7Embryonic Stem Cellsvia In Vitro Fertilization
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9Potential of Stem Cell Research
An enabling technology for
- Tissue/cell replacement
- Gene therapy/drug delivery
- Models of disease in vitro
- Drug screening and drug development
- Basic knowledge of human development
A path to new therapies and cures for many
diseases
10Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer
11Scale of a Human Egg
122001 Presidential Executive Order for Embryonic
Human Stem Cell Research
- Prohibits use of Federal funds on embryonic stem
cell lines derived prior to August 9, 2001 - Lines must have been derived from unused embryos
that were made for IVF
13States Respond
- California California Institute of Regenerative
Medicine - Connecticut Connecticut Stem Cell Research Grant
Project - Illinois Illinois Regenerative Medicine
Institute - Maryland Maryland Stem Cell Commission
- Massachusetts Governor's Life Science Initiative
- Minnesota Stem Cell Institute
- New Jersey Stem Cell Institute of New Jersey
- New York Empire State Stem Cell Trust Fund
- Ohio Center for Stem Cell and Regenerative
Medicine
14Proposition 71
- Approved by 59 of CA voters
- Authorized 3 billion to fund stem cell research
in CA - Affirmed the right to conduct research not
supported by federal funding - Banned reproductive cloning
- Required development of medical and ethical
standards
15- Independent Citizens Oversight Committee (ICOC)
29 members - Chair Robert Klein
- Vice-Chair Ed Penhoet, Ph.D
- California Institute for Regenerative Medicine
(CIRM) 50 member staff (currently 26) - President Alan Trounson, Ph.D.
16Mission Statement
- To support and advance stem cell research and
regenerative medicine under the highest ethical
and medical standards for the discovery and
development of cures, therapies, diagnostics and
research technologies to relieve human suffering
from chronic disease and injury. -
Turning stem cells into cures. Roman Reed
17Working Groups of the CIRM
- Standards and Ethics Working Group (19)
- (prominent ethicists, scientists, patient
advocates) - Grants Review Working Group (23)
- (distinguished scientists from outside
California, patient advocates) - Facilities Working Group (11)
- (real estate experts patient advocates)
18Building a State Agency
Grants management Compliance Tracking
Procedures Regulations
and a Funding Agency
19Legal Challenges
- For over two years legal challenges prevented
the institute from issuing bonds - Two consolidated lawsuits challenged our
constitutional authority to spend state money - Very strong decision in Superior Court in May
2006 upholding CIRM position appealed - In May 2007, the California Supreme Court
declined to hear appeal and ended the legal
challenge -
- A third lawsuit (dismissed) asserted that we are
depriving frozen embryos of their constitutional
rights
20Funds for a Funding Agency
- Bond Anticipation Notes (BANs)
- -Authorized 14 M in BANs in April, 2006 for
first year of training grants - -Additional 36 M in BANs for research grants.
- Governors Loan
- 150M loan provided to CIRM by Governor
Schwarzenegger in July, following Presidential
veto on Castle-DeGette bill
21Making a plan
22Scientific Strategic Plan
- Define long-term objectives that CIRM will pursue
over ten years - Involved interviews with scientists, clinicians,
ethicists, patient advocates, public interest
groups - Focus group discussions and public meetings
- Heard from 200 individuals
- A living plan with mechanisms for review and
modification
Published December 2006
23Strategic Planning Framework
Resources
24Strategic Plan Goals
- Aspirational Goals
- What we hope to achieve
- Use stem cells to cure disease
- California as world-wide leader in stem cell
research - Commitment Goals
- Our covenant with the people of California for
what we will achieve over the next ten years
25Commitment Goals Context
- Scientifically young field
- Therapeutic drug development takes time and
fails more often than it succeeds - New treatment modality cellular therapy
26Commitment Goals
- Focused on human embryonic stem cells, with
emphasis on cell replacement therapy - Ten year goals
- Goal 1 Clinical proof of principle that
transplanted cells derived from pluripotent cells
can be used to restore function for at least one
disease. - Goal 2 Therapies based on stem cell research in
Phase I or Phase II clinical trials for 2-4
additional diseases
27Laying the Foundation
28CIRM Training Program
- 16 non-profit institutions in California
- 169 Trainees (pre-doc, post-doc, clinical)
- Course in stem cell biology
- Course in ethical, legal, and social issues
- Annual meeting of trainees
- Grants awarded in April, 2006
- Total 38M for 3 years
29Jumpstart Initiative to Enable Stem Cell
Research
- CIRM SEED Grants
- 200K/yr, 2 yrs
- Innovative projects
- Comprehensive Research Grants
- 400K/yr, 4 yrs
- Established investigators in SCB/related field
- Shared Laboratory Space
- Fund renovation of lab space for hESC work
- Fund instructional course
30Latest Initiatives
- New Faculty Awards
- Enable young faculty scientists and physicians to
- New Cell Lines Awards
- Enable the development of new pluripotent stem
cell lines for research and therapies - Disease Teams
- Create teams of researchers
31Whats Next
- New President
- New Initiatives
- Develop for-profit funding
- Community outreach
- Growing the Institute
32Acknowledgements
- Bob Klein
- Zach Hall
- Arlene Chiu
- Alan Trounson
- Rich Murphy
- CIRM Team
- All those who have generously contributed their
time and expertise to making CIRM and the vision
embodied in Proposition 71 a reality -
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34Scientific Challenges
- Capabilities of different types of stem cells
- Control division in vitro and in vivo
- Control paths of differentiation
- Safe production of large numbers of cells
- Immunological tolerance
- Production of SC lines with disease phenotypes
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