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| [March 07, 2013] |
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Minerva Biotechnologies Announces Major Breakthrough in Human Stem Cell Research
WALTHAM, Mass. --(Business Wire)--
Minerva Biotechnologies, a leading cancer and stem cell
development company today announced a major breakthrough in human stem
cell research. Minerva scientists converted established human stem cells
to the elusive "naïve" state and maintained them there indefinitely
simply by culturing the cells in the dimeric form of a natural, but
newly discovered human growth factor, called NM23-H1. It is widely
believed that figuring out how to stably induce naïve pluripotency in
human stem cells is critical for realizing the promise of human stem
cell therapies.
"This is very exciting," said Dr. Cynthia Bamdad, Minerva President and
Chief Executive Officer, "Until now scientists had only been able to
temporarily convert human stem cells to the naïve state by genetically
modifying the cells or by treating the cells with a cocktail of
biochemical inhibitors. This appears to be the natural growth factor
that keeps stem cells in the truly pluripotent naïve state and overcomes
what had been a major impediment to developing human stem cell
therapies."
Scientists have recently become quite interested in getting human stem
cells into the "ground" or "naïve" state because only these cells are
truly pluripotent and able to properly differentiate into any cell in
the human body. Mouse stem cells ave been much easier to work with
because the growth factor that maintains them in the naïve state has
been known for some time. However, the growth factor that maintains
human stem cells in the naïve state was, until now, unknown. Cultured
human stem cells exist in a more mature state, called "primed". Thus,
the numerous breakthroughs in mouse stem cell science simply cannot be
reproduced using human stem cells. Therefore, it has been a major
scientific goal to understand the biology of human stem cells: to
understand what regulates naïve pluripotency and what induces their
differentiation to the primed state.
In a research article, "MUC1* Ligand, NM23-H1, is a Novel Growth
Factor that Maintains Human Stem Cells in a More Naïve State,"
published today in the journal PLoS ONE http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058601,
Minerva reported that, for the first time, generically unmodified human
stem cells were converted to, and maintained in, the "naïve" state by
culturing the cells in the dimeric form of a naturally occurring protein
called NM23-H1. Interestingly, subsequent exposure of the naïve cells to
bFGF, the standard growth factor used in all human stem cell culture,
reversed the process and caused the cells to enter the "primed" state.
As predicted by comparison to mouse naive cells, the NM23-H1 cultured
stem cells had a much higher cloning efficiency than the same cells
cultured in FGF-containing media and differentiated in a coordinated way
with as high as 90% of the cells in a local environment differentiating
down the same germline. The Minerva system is free of feeder cells,
conditioned media, exogenously added cytokines or growth factors, other
than NM23-H1. After initial acclimation to the new media, the stem cells
remain essentially 100% pluripotent, requiring no manual dissection or
other manipulations that would interfere with large scale production and
automated stem cell culture.
Kenneth S. Kosik, M.D., the Harriman Professor of Neuroscience and
Co-Director of the UC Santa Barbara Neuroscience Research Institute, as
well as a co-author on the paper said, "The results reported today
provide both basic insights into the biology of human stem cells and
open the door to medical applications for stem cells."

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