Monthly Archives: March 2017

Researchers find key to ‘tired’ blood and immune systems – Medical Xpress

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:41 am

March 3, 2017 by Jeff Norris

A molecular key to aging of the blood and immune system has been discovered in new research conducted at UC San Francisco, raising hope that it may be possible to find a way to slow or reverse the growing risk for aging-associated chronic inflammatory diseases, anemia, blood cancers, and life-threatening infections.

The key is a link between the health of a rare population of adult stem cells that arise early in development and are responsible for replenishing all blood cell types throughout a lifetime, and a newly identified role for autophagy, an important cellular cleanup and recycling process that was the focus of the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

In their new study, published online March 1 in Nature, the UCSF team discovered that in addition to its normal role in cellular waste-processing, autophagy also is needed for the orderly maintenance of blood-forming hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), the adult stem cells that give rise to red blood cells, which carry oxygen, and to platelets, which prevent bleeding, as well as the entire immune system, which fights infections and disposes of pathogens.

The researchers found that autophagy keeps HSCs in check by allowing metabolically active HSCs to return to a resting, quiescent state akin to hibernation. This is the default state of adult HSCs, allowing their maintenance for a lifetime.

According to Emmanuelle Passegu, PhD, the senior scientist for the study, "This is a previously unknown role for autophagy in stem cell biology."

Failure to activate autophagy has profound impacts on the blood system, Passegu's team found, leading to the unbalanced production of certain types of blood cells. Defective autophagy also diminished the ability of HSCs to regenerate the entire blood system when they were transplanted into irradiated mice, a procedure similar to bone marrow transplantation.

The researchers determined that 70 percent of HSCs from old mice were not undergoing autophagy, and these cells exhibited the dysfunctional features common among old HSCs. However, the 30 percent of old HSCs that did undergo autophagy looked and acted like HSCs from younger mice.

Passegu led the study while she was a professor of medicine with the Eli and Edythe Broad Center for Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCSF. In January she became an Alumni Professor in the Department of Genetics & Development and the director of the Columbia Stem Cell Initiative at Columbia University Medical Center.

Therapies for Rejuvenating Aging Blood and Immune Systems Scientists have identified many different tissue-specific stem cells, all of whose performance declines with age, Passegu said. Finding out how this occurs has been an active area of research, and a focus of her laboratory group in recent years.

In a large series of experiments and analyses, many conducted by the study's first author, Theodore Ho, a UCSF graduate student, the scientists compared characteristics of HSCs from old mice with those of HSCs from younger mice that had been genetically programmed so that they could not undergo autophagy. They found that loss of autophagy in young mice was sufficient to drive many of the defects that arise naturally in the blood of old mice, including changes in the cellular appearance of HSCs and a disruption in the normal proportions of the various types of blood cells, characteristics of old age.

Previous research had shown that autophagy causes the formation of "sacs" within cells that can engulf and enzymatically digest molecules and even major cellular structures, including mitochondria, the cell's biochemical power plants. But in the new study, the researchers found that genetically programmed loss of autophagy resulted in the accumulation of activated mitochondria with increased oxidative metabolism that triggered chemical modifications of DNA in HSCs.

These "epigenetic" DNA modifications altered the activities of genes in a way that changed the developmental fate of HSCs. They triggered disproportionate production of certain blood cells and reduced the ability of HSCs to regenerate the entire blood system when transplanted. This result was similar to what the researchers observed in the majority of old HSCs that failed to activate autophagy.

In contrast, the minority of old HSCs that still exhibited significant levels of autophagy were able to keep their mitochondria and metabolism in check, and could re-establish a healthy blood system following transplantation, similar to HSCs from young mice.

However, in a hopeful sign for potential future therapies to rejuvenate blood stem cells, the researchers succeeded in restoring autophagy to old HSCs by treating them with pharmacological agents in a lab dish.

"This discovery might provide an interesting therapeutic angle to use in re-activating autophagy in all of the old HSCs, to slow the aging of the blood system and to improve engraftment during bone marrow or HSC transplantation," Passegu said. "It is our hope that the end point will be a way to really improve the fitness of stem cells and to use that capability to help the elderly by preventing the development of blood cancers and providing them with better immune systems to fight infections."

Explore further: Scientists wage fight against aging bone marrow stem cell niche

More information: Theodore T. Ho et al. Autophagy maintains the metabolism and function of young and old stem cells, Nature (2017). DOI: 10.1038/nature21388

As people get older so do the hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that form their blood, creating an increased risk for compromised immunity and certain blood cancers. Now researchers are reporting in the scientific journal EMBO ...

Researchers at the University of Illinois report they can alter blood cell development through the use of biomaterials designed to mimic characteristics of the bone marrow.

Unlike aspirin, bone marrow doesn't come with a neatly printed label with dosage instructions. However, a new study published in Cell Reports provides clues about how the dose of transplanted bone marrow might affect patients ...

University of California San Francisco scientists have identified characteristics of a family of daughter cells, called MPPs, which are the first to arise from stem cells within bone marrow that generate the entire blood ...

People with leukaemia could be helped by new research that sheds light on how the body produces its blood supply.

Stem cells of the aging bone marrow recycle their own molecules to survive and keep replenishing the blood and immune systems as the body ages, researchers at UC San Francisco (UCSF) have discovered.

A molecular key to aging of the blood and immune system has been discovered in new research conducted at UC San Francisco, raising hope that it may be possible to find a way to slow or reverse the growing risk for aging-associated ...

A substance widely known as a villain for its role in causing obesity-related health problems has emerged as a possible hero in the fight against a debilitating genetic disorder.

Ionizing radiation incidentsnuclear war, nuclear accidents or terrorist dirty bombs, for examplecan cause mass fatalities. Since resources for medical countermeasures are limited, it's critically important to swiftly ...

(Medical Xpress)A team of researchers from China and Japan has found that BHPF, a replacement chemical for BPA in plastics, can also cause estrogen-related problems in mice. In their paper published in the journal Nature ...

Using antibodies to treat disease has been one of the great success stories of early 21st-century medicine. Already five of the ten top-selling pharmaceuticals in the United States are antibody products. But antibodies are ...

A French teen who was given gene therapy for sickle cell disease more than two years ago now has enough properly working red blood cells to dodge the effects of the disorder, researchers report.

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

Read more from the original source:
Researchers find key to 'tired' blood and immune systems - Medical Xpress

Posted in Cell Medicine | Comments Off on Researchers find key to ‘tired’ blood and immune systems – Medical Xpress

Teenager’s sickle cell reversed with world-first therapy – BBC News

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:41 am


Fox News
Teenager's sickle cell reversed with world-first therapy
BBC News
A French teenager's sickle cell disease has been reversed using a pioneering treatment to change his DNA. The world-first procedure at Necker Children's Hospital in Paris offers hope to millions of people with the blood disorder. Scientists altered the ...
Doctors reverse teen's sickle cell disease with innovative gene therapyFox News
Gene therapy shows early promise against sickle cellChicago Tribune
Game-Changing Gene Therapy Nullifies Patient's Sickle Cell DiseaseIFLScience
BBC News -Bioscience Technology -The Japan Times
all 27 news articles »

See original here:
Teenager's sickle cell reversed with world-first therapy - BBC News

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Teenager’s sickle cell reversed with world-first therapy – BBC News

Keithley’s Korner: Big benefits from Stem Cell Therapy – Ruidoso News

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:41 am

Tim Keithley, Guest columnist 7:45 a.m. MT March 2, 2017

Tim Keithley(Photo: Courtesy)

Like a lot of folks who love to go skiing, play tennis, and enjoy the Ruidoso year-round beautiful weather, I became discouraged when my right knee went out climbing down a staircase recently.

I waited a few days figuring that it might heal like it always has done before. But this time the injury felt different and seemed to be getting worse.

Turns out you have a torn tendon in your right knee, Dr. Steven Rath of Fusion Medical Spa said on New Mexico in the Morning.

It obviously wasnt going to heal itself, so we had Tim come in and consider stem cell therapy, Dr. Rath said. It turns out that we were able to help his body heal itself without putting him through painful knee surgery.

Within a day after the procedure this week, the knee was sore from having the shots injected right into the tendon, but the regular pain had subsided. It made me a believer in the stem cell therapy Dr. Rath has been talking about on the radio for some time.

Heres a simple explanation of the procedure: Dr. Rath draws your own blood, then separates out the healing platelets through a spinning process, then injects those back into your body to the specific area that needs healing.

Stem cell therapy is nothing new, but its still considered an alternative form of treatment and an experiment, Dr. Rath said. Part of the reason why insurance companies dont cover the procedure has to do with the fact that medical companies prefer patients have surgery when it may not be necessary.

There may be patients out there who definitely need surgery, but providing this procedure has kept many of my patients from having to go under the knife.

Having had the procedure done on my knee this week, I can testify that it works and has given me a new hope that soon Ill be back on the slopes and the tennis court without having the ordeal of potential knee surgery.

Thus far in my practice, stem cell therapy has helped many people in your same situation, Dr. Rath said.

Tim Keithley is the host of the New Mexico in the Morning radio show Monday through Friday, 9 to 10 a.m., on KRUI 1490 AM, KWMW 105.1 FM and 99.1 FM or live streaming at mtdradio.com.

Read or Share this story: http://r-news.co/2lDmO8k

Continue reading here:
Keithley's Korner: Big benefits from Stem Cell Therapy - Ruidoso News

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Keithley’s Korner: Big benefits from Stem Cell Therapy – Ruidoso News

Journey of hope: City native seeks stem cell therapy to heal Bristol … – Bristol Observer (registration)

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:41 am

By LISA CAPOBIANCO

STAFF WRITER

When Bristol native Kevin Ouellette was born without an esophagus over 40 years ago, he made medical history.

While only a couple of hours old, Ouellette underwent a surgery that took part of his large intestine and connected it to where he was missing the esophagusand survived.

Hes the only one who survived that surgery, said Ouellettes mother, Sharon Viel of Bristol.

Post-surgery, Ouellette led a normal life, enjoying hobbies like cooking and fishing.

He married his wife, Janice, in 1992 and had two children, Albert and Jenna. Together they enjoyed various family outings like camping and going on Sunday drives.

But life suddenly changed in an instant when at age 32, Ouellette had a massive heart attack, leading him to undergo triple bypass surgery and months of recuperation.

Since then, Ouellette had two more heart attacks, in addition to battling aspiration pneumonia a couple dozen times and countless hospital stays.

He then hit rock bottom after having a fifth heart attack.

It wasnt until I had the last heart attack that it went down hill pretty bad, said Ouellette, who had to retire from his job as a production manager for a manufacturing company.

Due to the heart attacks and aspiration pneumonias, along with other health issues, Ouellettes heart is permanently damaged, and now functions at 25 percent. In addition, his lungs now function at 16 percent.

I didnt have any breathing apparatuses four months ago, said Ouellette, who was diagnosed with COPD.

His heartnow functions at 25 percent, so its not pushing oxygen through his lungs, said Janice. Thats a big part of the breathing issues.

Although his pulmonologist suggested a heart/lung transplant, Ouellette found out from his thoracic surgeon that the transplant would involve removing his esophagusa type of surgery that has never been performed.

But the Ouellette family never lost hope. Ouellette hopes to receive stem cell therapy to improve his lung function.

After conducting research to find a reputable stem cell therapy center, the Ouellette family came across one in New York City that seems to be promising: Park Avenue Stem Cell Therapy Center.

Founded in 2015, Park Avenue Stem Cell Therapy Center has two board-certified surgeons with over 30 years of medical experience and treats a variety of diseasesfrom

cardiac/pulmonary to autoimmune to urologic.

The family recently visited the center, which uses fat derived stem cells for deployment and clinical research. According to Park Avenues website, autologous stem cells from a patients own fat are simple to harvest safely under local anesthesia and are abundant in quantities up to 2,500 times those seen in bone marrow. Once the fat derived stem cells are administered back into the patient, they have the potential to repair human tissue by forming new cells of mesenchymal origin, including cartilage, bone, ligaments, tendons, nerve, fat, muscle, blood vessels, and certain internal organs, Park Avenues website further explains.

Although stem cell therapy has not yet been approved by the FDA, Ouellette and his family still have faith that this could be the treatment that will heal his lungs.

Its still experimental, said Ouellette. Butmy surgery was experimental when I was a child. Very few children lived through my surgery.

Weve searched over the years to find someone his age that lived for as long as he has, and we have yet to find anybody with other medical problems. His thoracic surgeon in Boston travels all over the place, and he has yet to find somebody that was born like that and has other complications, and is still alive at this age, said Janice.

We have a glimmer of hope, added Sharon.

If all goes according to plan, Ouellette hopes to undergo the therapy by the end of the month or in April. As the procedure is not covered by insurance, Jenna and Albert recently set up a GoFundMe page for their father, whom they also refer to as their Superman. To date, the online fundraiser has received over $2,000 in donations. The family also is planning a pasta dinner this Sunday (March 5) at the Bristol Polish Club.

Its an ongoing costly [treatment]. Hell still need treatments after every three months for the first year, said Janice. Weve done a lot of research, and found a lot of patients who have undergone it. We read their thoughts, and it was positive, so we can only hope that it works.

Although the Ouellette familys daily lives have changed, their love and support for one another have remained the same inside their Terryville home. One addition to the family that has brightened their day is Ouellettes six-month-old granddaughter, Sofiathe daughter of Albert and his girlfriend, Emily Kuharski.

We have a huge support system, said Janice, adding how her family has received an outpour of support from the community.

Always stay positiveno matter how bad the situation looks, said Albert.

The pasta dinner benefit for Kevin Ouellette will take place on Sunday (March 5), 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Bristol Polish Club, 541 North Main St., Bristol. Tickets are available at the door for $15 per adult and $5 per child.

To make a donation, visit http://www.gofundme.com/ stemcellsforsuperman.

The Ouellette family of Terryville is hosting a pasta dinner benefit for their Superman, Kevin Ouellette, second to the left, this Sunday. Kevin has an opportunity to undergo a therapy that will improve his lung function. (SUBMITTED)

More here:
Journey of hope: City native seeks stem cell therapy to heal Bristol ... - Bristol Observer (registration)

Posted in Cell Therapy | Comments Off on Journey of hope: City native seeks stem cell therapy to heal Bristol … – Bristol Observer (registration)

New potential cause of type 1 diabetes – Science Daily

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:40 am


The Zimbabwe Daily
New potential cause of type 1 diabetes
Science Daily
T1D, previously known as juvenile diabetes, affects an estimated 1.5 million Americans and is the result of the loss of insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. The prevailing belief was that the root cause of T1D was the immune system mistakenly ...
Curing Diabetes Natural Home Remedies Offer Type 2 Diabetes CureMilitary Technologies
Is the cure for Diabetes here?The Zimbabwe Daily

all 5 news articles »

See the original post:
New potential cause of type 1 diabetes - Science Daily

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on New potential cause of type 1 diabetes – Science Daily

New treatment for fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes burns up fat in liver – Science Daily

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:40 am


Science Daily
New treatment for fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes burns up fat in liver
Science Daily
It is linked to obesity, insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Up to 30 percent of subjects with NAFLD develop non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) in which hepatic inflammation and scarring can lead to cirrhosis and liver ...

Follow this link:
New treatment for fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes burns up fat in liver - Science Daily

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on New treatment for fatty liver disease and type 2 diabetes burns up fat in liver – Science Daily

Collaborative diabetes clinic lowers health care costs – Science Daily

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:40 am


Science Daily
Collaborative diabetes clinic lowers health care costs
Science Daily
Diabetes cost the U.S. an estimated $245 billion in 2012, in direct medical costs and reduced productivity. Health care providers are facing increasing pressure to achieve better patient outcomes at a lower cost. To help address these issues ...

See the original post here:
Collaborative diabetes clinic lowers health care costs - Science Daily

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Collaborative diabetes clinic lowers health care costs – Science Daily

New devices help diabetes patients – Grand Forks Herald

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:40 am

Q. A friend of mine just had an LVAD inserted. What's that?

A. LVAD stands for left ventricular assist device. The left ventricle is the pumping chamber of the heart. When it is damaged, its pumping ability is reduced, and the patient may develop heart failure, often manifested by shortness of breath, ankle swelling, cough, fatigue and exercise intolerance. The damaged left ventricle can be helped by medication, but in extreme cases, sometimes the only option is a new heart a heart transplant. But some people (because of age or other medical conditions) may not be transplant candidates. And others are candidates but are so sick that in the past they used to die while waiting for a donor heart to become available. That's where an LVAD can come into play. It is a mechanical pump that is surgically implanted, and it works with the patient's own heart to improve circulation and blood flow. Symptoms often are improved, and LVADs have been a lifesaver for many patients. The devices have become better, more reliable, smaller and safer over the years. And while they certainly have important complications associated with their use, LVADs have enabled very sick patients to live better and longer lives.

Wynne is vice president for health affairs at UND, dean of the School of Medicine and Health Sciences, and a professor of medicine. He is a cardiologist by training.

Submit a question to Health Matters at healthmatters@med.und.edu or Health Matters, 501 North Columbia Road, Stop 9037, Grand Forks, ND 58202-9037. Remember, no personal details, please.

The content of this column is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for professional medical advice or care. The information provided herein should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease. If you have or suspect you may have a health problem, you should consult your health care provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read in this column.

See original here:
New devices help diabetes patients - Grand Forks Herald

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on New devices help diabetes patients – Grand Forks Herald

Unexplained abnormalities in stem cells prompt Columbia researchers to pull diabetes paper – Retraction Watch (blog)

Posted: March 3, 2017 at 10:40 am

Researchers at Columbia University have retracted a 2013 paper in The Journal of Clinical Investigation, after uncovering abnormalities in the stem cell lines that undermined the conclusions in the paper.

Last year, corresponding author Dieter Eglidiscoveredhe could notreproduce key data in the 2013 paper because almost all the cell lines first author Haiqing Hua used contained abnormalities, casting doubt on the overall findings. When Egli reached out to Hua foranswers, Hua could not explain the abnormalities. As a result, Hua and Egli agreed the paper should be retracted.

Since some of the details of how the paper ended up relying on abnormal cells remain unclear, the university confirmed to us that it is investigating the matter.

Heres the retraction notice for iPSC-derived cells model diabetes due to glucokinase deficiency, cited 42 times:

The corresponding authors were made aware of karyotype abnormalities through a routine quality control test of pluripotent stem cells used in the studies reported in this paper. After extensive internal review and genetic analysis, they found that the karyotypes of some of the cells used for the experiments reported were abnormal and that the normal karyotypes shown in Figure 1 and Supplemental Figure 2 were not from cell lines used in the study. They also cannot confirm the endonuclease-mediated correction of the mutant GCK G299R allele. H. Hua takes responsibility for the characterization and presentation of cell line karyotypes and the genetic manipulations. Because of these discrepancies, the authors wish to retract the article. They apologize for these errors and for any inconvenience caused to others.

In the fall of 2009, Hua joined Rudolph Leibels diabetes and nutrition lab at Columbia University, under the co-supervision ofEgli, who brought an expertise in stem cell biology. Hua told us:

The aim of my research project was to leverage the expertise of both Dr. Egli (on stem cell biology) and Dr. Leibel (on diabetes) and to demonstrate the concept that the islet cells generated in the lab from diabetic patients through stem cell technology would present comparable dysfunction as the islet cells in the patients body. Because we chose patients with genetic mutations that cause diabetes, we were hoping to demonstrate that correction of the mutations would restore the normal function of the islet cells.

But, Hua noted, he wasnt and still isnt an expert in stem cell biology, so he had to learn on the job:

When I began the project, I never worked with cells before and had no experience or understanding of cell line karyotype.

Hua started by generating several cell lines from a diabetic patient. To check that the genetic makeup of these cell lines were the same, he sent several for analysis to a contracted service, which examines 20 cells per cell line and generates a report:

I did karyotype analysis for the cell lines right after I derived them, probably in 2011, before I started to do any experiments on them. The reports came back with some cells being normal and some being abnormal. To be fair, I thought what I learned from Dr. Egli was that it is a normal phenomenon that some cells are abnormal as long as the number is not high.

Indeed, Egli, an assistant professor of stem cell biology at Columbia University Medical Center, confirmed that pluripotent stem cells are often prone to undergo abnormalities:

Karyotypic abnormalities are common, and occur in many cells upon extended cultures, so this is not in and of itself a concern. Often one can go back to earlier cultures that are normal.

Hua published the work in 2013, along with a relatedpaper in Diabetes in 2014, -Cell Dysfunction Due to Increased ER Stress in a Stem Cell Model of Wolfram Syndrome. Hua believes, at a conceptual level, both papers achieved the goal of demonstrating that the correction of the mutations would restore the normal function of the islet cells.

In 2014, Hua told usthat he moved back to China for family reasons.

Last year, other investigators asked Egli to share the cells lines from the 2013 study. To ensure he was providing high quality material, Egli sent what he believed to be normal cell lines from the study for quality control testing. Egli said thats when he learned many of the cell lines contained abnormalities.

To suss out the problem, Egli went back to the cell lines stored in the lab to look for normal cells:

Dr. Hua had already left the University at that time and so I personally started to look for karyotypically normal cells. There were no normal cells to be found.

Egli explained what the abnormalities meant for the study results:

You could best describe the abnormalities of the [cell] lines [Hua] used as mumbo-jumbo. There were multiple rearrangements in the chromosomes in the cell lines and thus you wouldnt know if the effects you saw were due to gene modifications or simply due to those rearrangements. Essentially, the abnormal cell lines question the entire paper, and its very unlikely the paper would have been accepted at the journal.

When Egli failed to reproduce the data from the 2013 paper, he contacted Hua to find out where the normal cell lines were. But Hua was not sure in fact, he told us it was a surprise to learn that most of the cell lines he had used contained abnormalities, adding:

another layer of complication is that when cells became karyotype abnormal, they could behave like cancer cells, namely they could start as minor portion in the culture but later on took over and became majority. So another mistake we made was that we didnt perform karyotype analysis at the end of the study to make sure that after all the experiments we did, the cells were still normal.

A spokesperson at Columbia University verified that the university is conducting an investigation into the issues:

I could confirm that there is an ongoing investigation.

When Hua was informed of these issues, he suggested the study be retracted:

Immediately, I proposed to Dr. Egli and Dr. Leibel that we should retract the publication because we were not certain about the conclusion any more.

Hua takes responsibility for what happened, adding:

So this was done at very early phase of my research, and I was busy with a lot of parallel projects since I was the first post-doc of Dr. EgliBecause I wasnt understanding the problem correctly, I put up the figures with normal karyotype as first figure for the publication and continued my research with one particular cell line.

Egli also talked about the experience of retracting a paper:

Retracting a paper is not a rewarding process, and often reports stay in the literature even if they should not. Retracting the paper exposes us to the possibility of damage. I took proactive steps to investigate and retract because I wanted to correct the record. This would not have happened without my initiative involving 2-3 months of benchwork.

Hua described this as a truly unfortunate and painful chapter, which he hopes others can learn from:

The health of academic world and advance of science really depends on correction of previous mistakes and clearance of uncertainties. [A]voiding overwhelming multitasking is important. At the first year of my research, I was setting the lab together with Dr. Egli and meanwhile performed more than 100 experiments. Each of them would took more than 10 days and I was really stacking all the experiments. This particular project was about one fourth of my effort at that time. My biggest recommendation or reflection would be that it is very very very important to quality control and characterize starting materials of a project. Many people, including myself, are more focused on rushing the project forward and do not realized that if the starting materials are flawed, anything built on them has no solid foundation.

Hat tip: Rolf Degen

Like Retraction Watch? Consider making a tax-deductible contribution to support our growth. You can also follow us on Twitter, like us on Facebook, add us to your RSS reader, sign up on our homepage for an email every time theres a new post, or subscribe to our daily digest. Click here to review our Comments Policy. For a sneak peek at what were working on, click here.

Read the original here:
Unexplained abnormalities in stem cells prompt Columbia researchers to pull diabetes paper - Retraction Watch (blog)

Posted in Diabetes | Comments Off on Unexplained abnormalities in stem cells prompt Columbia researchers to pull diabetes paper – Retraction Watch (blog)

Source of Health shows how stem cells can help heal joint pain – ABC15 Arizona

Posted: March 1, 2017 at 11:44 pm

Come See Sonoran Living Live!

Sonoran Living is looking for LIVE studio audiences! Reservations are available for FREE via e-mail: slviewers@abc15.com.

Taping schedule:The show airs live daily. Currently we are only booking audiences for the first Friday of the month. Sign up for our audience!Please send us an email with name(s), date you would like to be in the audience, contact person, e-mail and contact phone number.

What are the age requirements?You must be 18 years or older to attend a taping of Sonoran Living Live.

Should I bring my ID to the studio?Yes, you must have a valid photo ID to enter the studio.

How many seats can I reserve?Group tickets are available.

How long will the taping last?The show will air live for one hour from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.

What time do I need to arrive for the taping?8:30 a.m. Late-comers will not be admitted.

Where is the studio?ABC15 Studios,515 N. 44th Street, Phoenix, AZ

Here is the original post:
Source of Health shows how stem cells can help heal joint pain - ABC15 Arizona

Posted in Arizona Stem Cells | Comments Off on Source of Health shows how stem cells can help heal joint pain – ABC15 Arizona