Farmington (WTNH) - There's a major breakthrough in stem cell research at the
University of Connecticut, placing the state at the forefront of
medical research.
Dr. Ge Lin came to Connecticut from China a year ago because
the state of Connecticut was one of a handful of states that had
decided to invest millions of dollars to do its own stem cell
research.
It took a year's worth of permits and paperwork. But once
approved, it took just two weeks for him to help the state to
become among the first in the nation to create two, new, human
embryonic stem cell lines.
He actually removed cells from less than one week old unused
embryos donated by patients at a fertility clinic.
The cells are then mixed with a special chemical cocktail.
"Once they attach and grow, expand, they become a cell line,"
Dr. Xu said.
Under the Bush Administration, no federal money was allowed
for this process. So, Connecticut and a few other states decided to
do it on their own.
"These are lines that are done here, they're fresh, they've been
quality controlled and they're the first step toward moving toward
using them in therapies," Dr. Marc Lalande, Director of UConn Stem
Cell Core Lab, said.
The Obama Administration is expected to lift the ban on
federal funding. Researchers at the University of Connecticut
Medical Center, in Farmington, think this major breakthrough will
place the state at the head of the line.
"This ability that we've now developed by Dr. Lin and Dr. Xu, in
this core facility, is very exciting," Dr. Lalande said. "It's
going to put us in the forefront of getting federal stem cell funds
because there's only a few states that have done this."
These new stem cell lines will be used to test the ability to
repair spinal tissue, brain tissue and other parts of the human
body. How long before there's a major medical breakthrough?
Dr. Lin: "Four to five years I think."
Davis: "That soon, you think?"
Dr. Lin: "Yes, the FDA has just released a clinical trial on
spinal cord injury using stem cells to treat patients."
The UCONN stem cell center has trained 100 hundred scientists
from UCONN, Yale, Wesleyan and UMASS.
More than 20 laboratories at these universities have begun using
these new human embryonic stem cell lines.
Governor Rell said today to those who asked three years ago if
the $100 million state investment was worth it she said,
"Absolutely."