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UF Researcher
Awarded Grant To Study Adult
Stem Cells' Potential To Treat Diabetes
RELEASE DATE: April
9, 2002
For more information
contact:
UF HSC Office of Public
Information, 352/392-2621
By Paula Rausch
GAINESVILLE --- Becton Dickinson Technologies has
awarded a University of Florida College of Medicine
researcher a grant to investigate the capability of
adult bone marrow stem cells to produce functioning
pancreatic cells that may one day be used to treat
diabetes.
The North Carolina-based
drug company awarded Bryon Petersen, Ph.D., an assistant
professor of pathology, immunology and laboratory
medicine, $250,000 to investigate the potential of
these therapeutic cells in diabetic mice over the
next two years.Petersen
is part of a multidisciplinary stem cell team based
in the department of pathology, the Evelyn F. and
William L. McKnight Brain Institute of UF, and the
UF Shands Cancer Center.
Petersen is trying
to determine whether adult bone marrow stem cells
are capable of becoming pancreatic islet cells that
can produce insulin. If so, such cells may one day
play a part in treating or even curing type 1 diabetes.
The research is
an extension of studies Petersen is conducting in
rats under a National Institutes of Health grant awarded
last year. By studying the role adult bone marrow
stem cells play in different animal species, scientists
may acquire broader insight into their function and
potential use in people.
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020409H4466
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