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Friday 15 November 2013

Ethics in relation to use of iPS or EC stem cells for doctors comment published on Millions in state funding for stem cells next year? at Nature Boston blog

Prof. Pranab Kumar Bhattacharya said:
Ethics in relation to use of iPS or EC stem cells for doctors

The U.S. government will now be able to fund research that involves human embryonic stem cell lines derived since August 9, 2001,as president USA Mr BarraK Obama’s remarks. Pluri -potent stem cells includes*embryonic stem (ES) and germ (EG) cell lines and embryonic carcinoma (EC) cell lines ES cells, isolated from human blastocyst and maintained in culture without differentiation for long periods.EG cells are isolated from primordial germ cells of genital ridges of 5-9 weeks old fetuses and form embryoid bodies***. EC cells are isolated from tetarocarcinomas.
The use of induced pluripotent embryonic stem cells (iPS) for regenerative medicine has captured the public’s imagination and fuelled rising expectations of clinical benefits in very advanced countries. Clinicians in advanced countries today increasingly needs to manage his patients’ expectations of what exogenious stem cells may, or indeed may not, offer. Regenerative medicine is however a long way discipline. It can be summarized as treatments that seek to restore structure and function after injury and, by this definition, includes solid organ transplantation by exogenious stem cells from stem cell banks. Exogenious cultured Stem cells are also routinely today used in hematology( Peripheral blood stem cells/ cord blood stem cells/ allogenic bone marrow stem cells are used for hematological malignancies even in west Bengal, India), plastic surgery (cultured autologous keratinocytes for skin loss or burns), and in orthopedics (autologous chondrocyte transplantation for articular cartilage defects) or in CNS disorders like in Parkinson’s diseases, Multiple sclerosis, Motor neurone disease as Neurons can be generated from skin, skeletal muscle, hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), mesenchymal stem cell lines etc.. But surprisingly not for stroke which is a major burden of neurological mortality. The use of such human embryonic stem cells both for research and therapeutic purposes sparks an ethical debate in our mind, Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS) are mature cells taken from adults, such as skin cells, and transformed in the laboratory into pluripotent cells that can mature into a variety of different cell types. Researchers have generated more than 10 disease-specific iPS cell lines derived from patients with a variety of genetic diseases, such as diabetes and Parkinson’s disease but not for stroke. Please note it that exogenous stem cell transplantation, is fraught with both technical ,ethical and huge but huge cost difficulties for resource poor counties. A more attractive option that authors think it will be much effective if one can however some how would mobilize endogenous progenitor cells instead of exogenous cultured stem cell therapy. Many colony stimulating factors such as erythropoietin (EPO) and granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) are used to mobilize the hematopoitic stem cells as for example2.
Because iPS cells are derived from adult tissue, they seemingly sidestep the ethical issues of working with human embryos. A 2005 report by the President’s Council on Bioethics called iPS cells “ethically unproblematic and acceptable for use in humans.” A recent paper argues that the potential uses of iPS cells might pose ethical issues to the donors. iPS cells could be used to identify and test new therapeutics at research level and might also themselves be used as part of cell replacement therapy. Because the technology is so new, there are many unknown applications, adverse reactions – which is fine, because it looks like iPS cells can be grown in the laboratory indefinitely. Hence the ethical issue: People who donate their cells for iPS research might not have intended that their cells be used in a particular application for treatment. We hope that U.S. regulations allow scientists to use biological materials for research without donor consent if the material is de-identified from the donor, which many of the pioneering iPS studies did. However, genome sequencing could allow donor’s cells to be re-identified. Moreover, donors might support use of their cells in research, but not in sensitive areas such as in reproduction biology or in transplantation or for medical buisness.
Reference
1. Siddharthan Chandran What are the prospects of stem cell therapy for neurology? BMJ2008;337:a1934
2 .Sprigg, N, Bath PM, Zhao L, Willmot MR, Gray LJ, Walker MF, et al., Granulocyte-colony stimulating factor mobilises bone marrow stem cells in patients with sub-acute ischaemic stroke: the ‘Stem cell Trial of recovery EnhanceMent after Stroke’ (STEMS) pilot randomised controlled trial. Stroke 2006;37:2979-2983
3. Rapid responses publ;ished by by Nikola Sprigg, Tim England, Philip Bath “Stem cells for stroke (9 January 2009) for the article ANALYSIS: by author Siddharthan Chandran What are the prospects of stem cell therapy for neurology? BMJ 2008; 337: a1934Professor Pranab kumar Bhattacharya,Professor of.pathology, IPGME&R Kolkata-20Miss Upasana Bhattacharya & Mr.Ritwik Bhattacharya, B.com(cal)

Copy Right- Copy Right of this cooment in Journal Nature news belongs to Professor Pranab kumar Bhattacharya and his first degree relatives only as per copy right act & rules of Intellectual Property Right Rules 3D/107/1201a,b/ RDF Copy Right rules/ SPARC copy Right rules-2006/ and Protect intellectual Property Right(PIP) copy right rules of USA-2012.Please do not  try  to Infringe and be enough careful to use this article for your own safety if you are not direct Blood relation to prof Pranab Kumar Bhattacharya.

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