Plasticell has announced that Innovate UK has made a further investment in a therapeutic programme utilising CombiCult®, the high throughput stem cell technology designed to solve bottlenecks in regenerative medicine development
Innovate UK will provide a grant of approximately 1.3 million GBP to a research consortium led by Plasticell for a project entitled ‘Ex-vivo expansion of cord blood and bone marrow stem cells”. The consortium includes the University of Oxford and the Cell Therapy Catapult.
While bone marrow is currently the primary source of stem cells for haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), donor cells have to be immunologically matched to the recipent, resulting in demand far outstripping supply. In contrast, donated cord blood is plentiful and contains a high proportion of stem cells with a lower risk of tissue rejection despite immunological mismatch. HSCT from cord blood is currently limited by the low number of total cells present in each donated unit.
Using CombiCult®, Plasticell has tested millions of combinations of cell culture components to develop cord blood expansion media which amplify stem cells by up to 100-fold. This grant will allow the consortium to develop a clinically compliant process to expand cord blood stem cells ex vivo using Plasticell’s media, allowing more patients to be treated with this life-saving therapy.
Commenting on the award, Dennis Saw, Chief Executive of Plasticell, said:
“Using CombiCult®, our team of stem cell scientists is successfully tackling some of the most difficult problems in regenerative medicine, as is demonstrated by the development of highly effective cord blood expansion media. Since 2007, Plasticell has been awarded a number of competitive grants from the Technology Strategy Board, now Innovate UK, which have funded research projects costing an approximate 8.3 mln GBP in total. These awards recognise our industry experience and continued innovation at the cutting edge of stem cell research & development.”