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UC
to Play Major Role in Cell Institute
By Vic
Cox
With
voters’ passage this month of the California Stem Cell Research
and Cures Initiative, better known as Proposition 71, a new state
institute was created to regulate and fund stem cell research. Up
to $3 billion in state-backed bonds could be issued over 10 years
by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.
UC is preparing to play a major role in the institute
and its 29-member governing commission, according to President Robert
Dynes. “We intend to contribute to the success of the stem
cell research effort created by Prop. 71, both by participating
in its governance and, we hope, by conducting some significant part
of the research,” he said.
Prop. 71 specifies that the University is allotted
a minimum of five positions on the Independent Citizens Oversight
Commission (ICOC), the institute’s governing body. At the
regular meeting of the UC Regents last week, representatives from
UCLA, UC Davis, UC Irvine, UC San Diego, and UC San Francisco were
named to these slots.
Also last week, Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante announced
that UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau would be one of Bustamante’s
appointments to the ICOC.
Other commission members will be appointed by the
executive and legislative branches, according to Prop. 71. The constitutional
amendment directs ICOC membership to reflect nonprofit academic
and medical research institutions other than UC as well as advocacy
groups and business interests.
UC officials, while emphasizing the slow progress
inherent in basic research, nonetheless describe the new funding
mechanism as having exciting potential. “Stem cell research
holds great possibilities for improving human health worldwide,”
said Dynes.
These possibilities include current UC human embryonic
stem cell research to understand brain cells that cause Alzheimer’s
Disease; investigating ways for possible treatment of liver disease
and spinal cord injuries; and tissue regeneration or directing cell
growth to facilitated organ transplants.
While no embryonic human stem cells are currently
used in research at UCSB, there is “talk about organizing
a stem cell program,” said Dennis Clegg, chair of the Molecular,
Cellular, and Developmental Biology Department. “We are particularly
interested in the biochemistry and molecular biology of the aging
process.”
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