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I heard an interview with Darwin Prockop from Tulane's Center for Gene Therapy. It was very interesting, especially the discussion about cells which function to repair damaged cells. The interview may be available next week. Meanwhile -
Faculty - http://www.genetherapy.tulane.edu/faculty.shtml
Prockop's CV - http://www.genetherapy.tulane.edu/pdf/DJP_CV_081505.pdf (61 pages, over 500 publications!)
The major aim of the Center is to develop new therapies for a series of common diseases that include osteoporosis, osteoarthritis, parkinsonism, spinal cord injury, stroke and Alzheimer's disease. The primary strategy of the Center is to use adult stem cells that can easily be obtained from a patient and then used for therapy of the same patient. The Center will also provide educational programs for career development, job training and life long learning of citizens; establish a forum to evaluate the social, legal and ethical implications of gene therapy; and develop commercial applications of gene therapy with an emphasis on commercial developments within the State of Louisiana. The Center is supported by research funds from the federal government via National Institutes of Health grants, from the state of Louisiana via the Louisiana Gene Therapy Research Consortium and the Louisiana Board of Regents, from the Tulane University Health Sciences Center, the HCA - Healthcare Company and several private foundations. The Center is a major participant in the Louisiana Gene Therapy Research Consortium that includes gene therapy centers at the LSU Health Sciences Centers in New Orleans and in Shreveport. The Center was launched with a staff of 15 who moved with Dr. Prockop from Philadelphia. It now has a staff of over 30 with plans to increase the staff to about 50 within the next year or two. The Center is housed in 14,000 sq. ft. of modern laboratory space in the Tulane University Health Sciences Center's J. Bennett Johnston Building, located at 1324 Tulane Avenue, New Orleans, Louisiana.
The Tulane Center for Gene Therapy is under the directorship of Darwin J. Prockop, MD, PhD. Dr. Prockop has a distinguished career and his pioneering research is recognized throughout the world. He has been honored by his peers in many ways, including election to the National Academy of Science, two honorary degrees, and the Lee C. Howley Prize of the Arthritis Foundation for research on arthritis.
The therapies being developed by the Center are based on the discoveries largely made by Dr. Prockop and his associates that adult stem cells from a patient's own bone marrow can be gene engineered and then potentially used in the same patient to target the genes of the central nervous system, the bones, cartilage and many other tissues. The Center staff is doing research both on the basic biology of adult stem cells and developing procedures for use of the cells in patients with devastating diseases.
Fascinating stuff!Stem Cells
Characterization of the biological properties of adult stromal cells is essential for a better understanding of their normal function in adults as well as to revealing their potential in treating disease. Stem cells are so named because they are like the stems on a tree that can produce new leaves and flowers each year. Each stem cells has the remarkable property that is can divide so as to produce a perfect copy of itself together with a second cell that can become a "workhorse" cell of the body such as a bone cell or a nerve cell. Because the stem cell produced by the division is a perfect copy of the original stem cell, stem cells seem to be able to divide and live indefinitely, perhaps forever. Understanding stem cells is now one of the most important problems of biology. The Center staff is working at the forefront of research on stem cells using cutting edge technologies to define them in terms of the genes they express. Also, they have developed new procedures that make it possible to begin with a small sample of stem cells from a patient's bone marrow and grow extremely large numbers of the cells in the laboratory. The ability to grow the cells rapidly, in turn, makes it possible to gene engineer the cells with simple techniques that do not involve use of a virus.
Faculty - http://www.genetherapy.tulane.edu/faculty.shtml
Prockop's CV - http://www.genetherapy.tulane.edu/pdf/DJP_CV_081505.pdf (61 pages, over 500 publications!)
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