Plasticells Massively Parallel Approach is Set to Transform the Regenerative Medicine Research Landscape
UK stem cell biotech pioneer Plasticell has announced the publication of scientific research which demonstrates how the company’s innovative high throughput 'Combinatorial Cell Culture' (CombiCult) technology allows a single scientist to perform 10,000 stem cell biology experiments in parallel. The scientific paper ('Directed differentiation of embryonic stem cells using a bead-based combinatorial screening method')points to the potential of high throughput technologies such as “Combinatorial Cell Culture” to accelerate painfully slow biomedical research, which has hampered the development of new therapies ever since human embryonic stem cells were developed in 1998.
Plasticell’s cutting edge technology allows the discovery of improved methods to create chosen human cell types from stem cells, a critical step in the discovery of regenerative medicines to treat conditions such as diabetes, Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis. The 10,000 individual experiments would have required around 200 years to complete back-to-back.
Chris Mason, Professor of Regenerative Medicine Bioprocessing at UCL, whose research group conducted external validation of the technology commented: "Discovery of robust methods to differentiate stem cells remains a serious bottleneck for the industry. This is a major reason why only two pluripotent stem cell therapies have progressed to clinical trials despite the spending of many hundreds of millions of dollars on pluripotent stem cell translation. The unique CombiCult technology can dramatically increase research productivity, significantly cutting costs whilst accelerating the development of innovative therapies for serious medical conditions."
Dr Yen Choo, Plasticell’s Executive Chairman and senior author of the scientific paper, added: "Optimising laboratory methods to obtain affordable, industrialised cell manufacturing protocols is absolutely key to the development of cell therapies. The paper describes a study in which we used combinatorial screening to obtain a 250-fold reduction in cell bioprocessing costs, through a 50-fold increase in cell yield accompanied by a five-fold reduction in reagent costs via the use of cell culture media comprising small molecule drugs."
The paper also demonstrates use of CombiCult technology to produce large numbers of rare adult stem cells that maintain and repair various organs of the body such as the brain and heart. "We believe progenitor cells are key to the discovery of new drugs that regenerate specific tissues of the human body in response to injury, disease or ageing," added David Phillips, Partner at SR One, the corporate venture arm of the pharmaceutical company GSK, which is backing Progenitor Therapeutics, a Plasticell spin-out company that uses CombiCult to develop drug-based regenerative medicines.
Related News
-
News WuXi to sell CGT manufacturing unit to US-based Altaris LLC
At the tail end of 2024, Chinese-based CDMO WuXi AppTec announced the signing of their deal with private equity firm Altaris LLC, confirming the sale of WuXi Advanced Therapies, the cell and gene therapy manufacturing arm of WuXi AppTec. -
News Women in Pharma: Our hopes for 2025 and beyond
Our last instalment for 2024 of the Women in Pharma series brings you messages direct from the Informa Markets CPHI team as they discuss the advice and insights they have carried throughout their roles working at CPHI, and what they hope to see for the... -
News CPHI Milan Wrap-Up Report: Conference Highlights
Discover the emerging and trending topics of the pharmaceutical industry with our CPHI Milan Conference Highlights, with exclusive insight from pharmaceutical leaders and experts! -
News BIOSECURE Act not included in key defense spending bill for 2025
On December 7, 2024, the Biden administration revealed the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act, an annual defense bill specifying the budget and expenditures of the US Department of Defense. The controversial BIOSECURE Act was notably missing from ... -
News Lessons from CPHI Milan 2024: Sunny Intervals for Pharma Manufacturing?
As the 2024 CPHI conference wrapped up in Milan, we caught up with L.E.K. Consulting – a global strategy consulting firm with deep expertise in pharma manufacturing – to discuss evolving market perspectives and business outlook. -
News Trump 2.0: What does the US election result mean for the healthcare industry?
After Trump won the Presidential election in the US in early November, we take a look at some of the implications a new Trump administration could have on the health and pharmaceutical industry, and on US patients. -
News Women in Pharma: Reflections from Behind the Scenes
In this instalment of our monthly series, the team that brings you the Women in Pharma series each month sits down for a heart-to-heart on what the series means to them, and how they hope to continue their work in the future. -
News Scaling the Industry: CPHI Scale-Up Market interview with YSK Laboratories
For the first time, CPHI Milan hosted the CPHI Start-Up Market, expanding support for emerging and small-sized enterprises in their transition to the next level of growth. In this interview, we spoke with Yuvansh Khokhani, Managing Director of YSK Labo...
Position your company at the heart of the global Pharma industry with a CPHI Online membership
-
Your products and solutions visible to thousands of visitors within the largest Pharma marketplace
-
Generate high-quality, engaged leads for your business, all year round
-
Promote your business as the industry’s thought-leader by hosting your reports, brochures and videos within your profile
-
Your company’s profile boosted at all participating CPHI events
-
An easy-to-use platform with a detailed dashboard showing your leads and performance