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Tech Update
'iPS Cell Technology Can Cure Blood Diseases'
International stem cell meet by NCRM concludes with a
ray of hope
Treating blood cancers such as aplastic aneamia and thalassemia by stem cells
engineered in the lab will be possible in the near future, said Dr Yukio Nakamura,
a world renowned stem cell scientist and head of bio resources centre, Riken
Institute, Japan. He was speaking on the fourth anniversary of international
stem cell meeting by Chennai-based Nichi-In Centre for Regenerative Medicine
(NCRM), an Indo-Japan joint venture institute.
The iPS cell (Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells) technology discovered by Japanese
scientists would pave way for such breakthrough as this technology does not
involve usage of embryonic stem cells and therefore is devoid of ethical conflicts,
he added. This ray of hope for blood cancer victims had another shot in the
arm with the possibility of laboratory expansion of human bone marrow blood
forming stem cells (CD34+ cells) by the NCRM team without using animal protein
presented in the meeting.
Red Blood Cells (RBC) are the cells that carry oxygen from the lungs to the
other parts of the body which are depleted in conditions, like aplastic anemia
and in thalassemias defective blood cells are formed. Both need multiple transfusion
of blood components. However, finding donors whose blood or bone marrow will
match that of the patients' HLA for such transfusions is difficult. Now, Dr
Nakamura's team has developed a technology by which they could engineer RBCs
in the lab from iPS cells in large quantities, thereby avoiding the need for
searching donors every time the patient needs a transfusion which has been proven
in animal studies for safety and efficacy.
Another breakthrough discovery of multiplying the bone marrow CD34+ stem cells
(which are pluripotent and can also form blood components) in the lab was presented
by the NCRM scientists. There are several earlier reports using many growth
factors and serum derived from animal sources which not only make the procedure
very expensive, but also the contamination due to animal serum is of concern.
"However, in our methodology we have not used growth factors or animal
serum, which makes this technology affordable and contamination free,"
said Dr Abraham, Director, NCRM.
Earlier, Dr Ryuji Hata of Ehime university, Japan presented his work on prevention
of auditory hair cell damage in animal models using hematopoietic stem cells,
which he said in future may help treat sensory neural hearing loss.
Dr YY Rao of KG Hospital, Coimbatore, presented the successful outcome of bone
marrow stem cell application in end stage cardiac disease patients.
The deputy consul general of Japan, Takayuki Kitagawa lauded
the Indo-Japan collaborative efforts in this evolving field of stem cells by
NCRM and its Japanese collaborators.
EH News Bureau
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