30.04.2009 12:00:00
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BioTime Awarded a $4.7 Million Research Grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine
BioTime, Inc., (OTCBB:BTIM) announced today that the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) has approved a grant to the Company of $4.7 million to fund research related to its ACTCellerate™ embryonic stem cell technology. The overall objective of this grant is to generate tools useful in applying ACTCellerate™ technology to the manufacture of patient-specific therapeutic products.
BioTime’s technologies in regenerative medicine are based on the power of human embryonic stem (hES) cells and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells to become all of the cell types of the human body. There is a significant business opportunity in both the research and therapeutic sector for marketing the hundreds of human cell types that come from these stem cells. However, one of the greatest challenges for stem cell researchers is to identify methods to isolate the many hundreds of human cell types in a purified state.
The new grant funds awarded by CIRM will be used by BioTime to "industrialize” the manufacture of the purified cell types for therapeutic applications. In particular, the aims of the grant are to generate tools useful in implementing ACTCellerate™ technology in a patient-specific manner, such as from a patient’s own cells. Both BioTime and CIRM anticipate that the funded research may accelerate the translation of bench top science to bedside treatments for presently incurable diseases.
ACTCellerate™ is a novel technology that allows the expansion of over 140 highly-purified primitive human embryonic progenitor cells (hEPCs) from hES or iPS cells. These hEPCs may possess the ability to become a wide array of cell types with potential applications in research, drug discovery, and human regenerative stem cell therapy. BioTime already has isolated and expanded a number of hEPCs that are being marketed for research purposes only through the Company’s wholly owned subsidiary, Embryome Sciences, Inc.
CIRM was established in 2005 to fund over $3 billion dollars of research in the field of stem cell biology in California. In particular, it aims to support and advance stem cell research and regenerative medicine under the highest ethical and medical standards for the discovery and development of cures, therapies, diagnostics, and research technologies to relieve human suffering from chronic disease and injury. With this level of funding, CIRM is the largest source of funding for embryonic and pluripotent stem cell research in the world. CIRM's website can be found at http://www.cirm.ca.gov.
BioTime’s grant titled "Addressing the Cell Purity and Identity Bottleneck through Generation and Expansion of Clonal Human Embryonic Progenitor Cell Lines” was recommended for funding by CIRM's independent reviewers. The reviewer’s statement concluded that the "proposal addresses an unmet need in the field, is innovative, and has sound scientific rationale. If successful, the applicant’s work would benefit the field by providing: 1) a shared bank of standardized good manufacturing practice (GMP)-produced hEPCs with methods for industrial scale up of the lines; 2) peptide and antibody reagents with protocols for identification and isolation of hEPCs; and 3) reagents and protocols for differentiating hEPCs to clinically relevant cells. Reviewers concurred that these resources would help advance stem cell therapies to the clinic.”
"With these Early Translational grants, CIRM has taken the first step in funding translational research that will be critical for the development of future therapies,” said Alan Trounson, CIRM president. "These grants are an important part of CIRM’s strategy to fund the best basic research and then bring the results of that work to patients.”
"We deeply appreciate the generous support of the people of California for our research and product development,” said Dr. Michael D. West, BioTime’s Chief Executive Officer, who is the Principal Investigator on the grant. "This CIRM grant will allow us to offer important new products to stem cell researchers sooner than we had previously planned. We intend to compete for CIRM grant support for other programs as well. Such programs include iPS technology in the preclinical studies of the therapeutic uses of our technology, such as their use in the treatment of neurological, vascular, and orthopedic diseases.”
Background
Regenerative medicine refers to therapies based on human embryonic stem (hES) cell or induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell technology, designed to regenerate tissues afflicted with degenerative disease. The great scientific and public interest in regenerative medicine lies in the potential of hES and iPS cells to transform into any cell type of the human body. hES and iPS cells therefore show considerable potential as sources of new therapies for a host of currently incurable diseases such as diabetes, stroke, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, heart failure, arthritis, muscular dystrophy, spinal cord injury, macular degeneration, hearing loss, liver failure, and many other disorders where cells become dysfunctional.
ACTCellerate™ technology allows the isolation of novel, highly-purified embryonic progenitor cells (hEPCs). Embryonic progenitors are cells that are intermediate in the developmental process between embryonic stem cells and fully-differentiated cells. These progenitor cells may possess the ability to become a wide array of cell types with potential applications in research, drug discovery, and human regenerative stem cell therapy. Embryonic progenitor cells are relatively easy to manufacture on a large scale and in a purified state, which may make it advantageous to scale up these cells in the manufacturing process rather than scaling embryonic stem cells. BioTime’s subsidiary, Embryome Sciences, Inc., sells progenitor cells, and the specific culture media that stimulate the propagation of the cells, to the research community through the company’s website Embryome.com. BioTime and Embryome Sciences may also collaborate with others in the development of human therapeutic uses of the cell lines.
BioTime’s CIRM-funded research will address the need for the industrial-scale manufacture of purified therapeutic cells. Purity and precise identification of the desired cells are essential for therapy because unlike a drug, which may persist in the body for a matter of hours or days, a cell can persist in the body for a lifetime. Contamination of transplanted cells with cells of an unintended type could lead to serious complications, even tumor formation. The CIRM grant will provide up to $4.7 million of funding for this research project over a period of three years, with $1.6 million expected to be available during the first 12 months. BioTime expects that the first funds will be available some time during the summer of 2009 and that work on the project will be ready to begin upon the receipt of funding.
Embryome Sciences is presently marketing a family of cell growth media called ESpanTM. These growth media are optimized for the growth of human embryonic progenitor cells. Additional new products that Embryome Sciences has targeted for development are ESpyTM cell lines, which will be derivatives of hES cells that send beacons of light in response to the activation of particular genes. Embryome Sciences also plans to bring to market cells carrying specific disease genes in collaboration with the Reproductive Genetics Institute of Chicago, Illinois; new growth and differentiation factors that will permit researchers to manufacture specific cell types from embryonic stem cells; and purification tools useful to researchers in quality control of products for regenerative medicine.
About BioTime, Inc.
BioTime, headquartered in Alameda, California, is a biotechnology company focused on the emerging field of regenerative medicine. BioTime's lead product Hextend is a blood plasma expander used in surgery, emergency trauma treatment and other applications. Hextend is manufactured and distributed in the U.S. by Hospira, Inc. and in South Korea by CJ CheilJedang Corp. under exclusive licensing agreements.
BioTime markets its stem cell research products through its wholly owned subsidiary Embryome Sciences, Inc. which is developing new medical and research products using embryonic stem cell technology. Additional information about BioTime can be found on the web at www.biotimeinc.com.
Hextend®, ESpyTM, and ESpanTM, are trademarks of BioTime, Inc.
Forward-Looking Statements
Statements pertaining to future financial and/or operating results, future growth in research, technology, clinical development and potential opportunities for the company and its subsidiary, along with other statements about the future expectations, beliefs, goals, plans, or prospects expressed by management constitute forward-looking statements. Any statements that are not historical fact (including, but not limited to statements that contain words such as "will,” "believes,” "plans,” "anticipates,” "expects,” "estimates,”) should also be considered to be forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, including, without limitation, risks inherent in the development and/or commercialization of potential products, uncertainty in the results of clinical trials or regulatory approvals, need and ability to obtain future capital, and maintenance of intellectual property rights. Actual results may differ materially from the results anticipated in these forward-looking statements and as such should be evaluated together with the many uncertainties that affect the company's business, particularly those mentioned in the cautionary statements found in the company's Securities and Exchange Commission filings. The company disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements.
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