La Crosse Tribune
                         
                        University of Wisconsin-Madison lab makes new kind of 
stem cells safer
                        By DAVID WAHLBERG | Wisconsin State Journal

                        MADISON - The University of Wisconsin-Madison 
scientists who created a new kind of stem cells two years ago have removed a 
major obstacle to using the cells to develop treatments: genetic mutations that 
could cause cancer.

                        To make the cells - called induced pluripotent stem 
cells, or iPS cells - scientists put key genes into skin cells to reprogram the 
cells back to their embryonic states.

                        They previously used viruses to deliver the genes, but 
that caused permanent changes in the cells that scientists feared could cause 
cancer and other problems. Now they have found a way to transfer the genes 
temporarily, using rings of DNA called plasmids. The result is safer iPS cells 
because the genes that cause the cells to revert to their embryonic state 
dissipate and cannot cause further genetic changes.

                        The iPS cells behave like embryonic stem cells but 
don't carry their ethical baggage because no embryos are used. Now iPS cells, 
apparently free of significant safety concerns, could be closer to being ready 
for use in cell transplants for diabetes, Parkinson's disease, heart disease 
and other conditions, though other hurdles remain.

                        The new development, from the lab of campus stem-cell 
pioneer James Thomson, is reported in today's issue of the journal Science.
                        It's "a major advance toward safely reprogramming cells 
for clinical use," Marion Zatz, a leader of the National Institute of General 
Medical Sciences, part of the National Institutes of Health, said in a 
statement.

                        When viruses are used to make iPS cells, the 
reprogramming genes become a permanent part of the cells, causing mutations 
that can impair the function of the cells and possibly lead to cancer if the 
cells were used in treatments. When plasmids deliver the genes, they die off as 
the cells divide, the researchers said. That should remove the risk of cancer 
and other problems, they said.

                        Groups in Toronto and Boston recently announced other 
methods of making iPS cells more safely. But Thomson said his team is the first 
to fully solve the problem by getting rid of the viruses and the permanent 
genes.

                        "This is a fairly big milestone," he said. "With this 
approach, the genes never integrate into the cells' genome. It's clean and 
safer."

                        The Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, the 
university's tech-transfer arm, has applied for a patent on the new cells, he 
said.

                        Thomson was the first scientist in the world to 
successfully grow human embryonic stem cells, in 1998. The process requires the 
destruction of days-old embryos, usually left over from fertility clinics. This 
month, President Barack Obama lifted Bush administration restrictions on the 
use of federal funding for research on the cells.

                        In 2007, Thomson and his campus colleague Junying Yu 
co-discovered the original recipe for iPS cells, along with a competing team 
led by Japanese researcher Shinya Yamanaka.

                        Thomson and Yu worked together again - along with Kejin 
Hu, Kim Smuga-Otto, Shulan Tian, Ron Stewart and Igor Slukvin - to develop the 
safer method for iPS cells.

                        They relied on plasmids, the rings of DNA. They 
inserted seven key genes into the plasmids, which were then placed into cells 
from the foreskins of newborns.

                        The genes caused the cells to revert to their embryonic 
state, from which they are thought capable of becoming any of the body's 220 
cell types. Some of the new iPS cells have grown successfully for at least 
seven months.

                        Unlike viruses, plasmids don't take root in the genetic 
structures of the cells, Thomson said. They last long enough to trigger the 
reprogramming but not long enough to cause cancer or other problems, he said.

                        Several other safer methods of making iPS cells likely 
will be announced this year, as different scientists try different strategies, 
Thomson said. Researchers will analyze each kind and figure out which iPS cells 
are easiest to grow and most like embryonic stem cells, he said.

                        Once the best approach is identified, Thomson said, 
scientists will have the same hurdles and hopes with iPS cells as with 
embryonic stem cells: figuring out how to grow them into heart, brain or 
pancreas cells and other cell types in a way that can repair or replace tissues 
damaged by disease without harming patients. 



                 
           
     
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