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d-20347House OversightFinancial Record

Alan Trounson discusses California's stem‑cell program in 2013 LA Times interview

The passage is a routine media interview describing the goals and activities of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. It contains no specific allegations, financial transactions, or link CIRM was created under Proposition 71 with $3 billion in state bonds. Alan Trounson, an Australian IVF pioneer, was president of CIRM in 2013. CIRM was pursuing 70+ projects moving toward clinical tr

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #029539
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a routine media interview describing the goals and activities of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. It contains no specific allegations, financial transactions, or link CIRM was created under Proposition 71 with $3 billion in state bonds. Alan Trounson, an Australian IVF pioneer, was president of CIRM in 2013. CIRM was pursuing 70+ projects moving toward clinical tr

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financial-flowpoliticspublic-fundingstem-cell-researchcalifornia-institute-for-regenpublic-policyhouse-oversight

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Alan Trounson, California's Dr. Stem Cell -- latimes.com Page 1 of 4 latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-0529-morrison-trounson-20 130529,0,7837846.column latimes.com Patt Morrison Asks Alan Trounson, California's Dr. Stem Cell As president of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, the Australian is helping guide the state to a high-tech medical future. Patt Morrison May 29, 2013 In 2004, with President George W. Bush dead set advertisement against stem cell research, California just went ahead [> and did it. Voters made stem cell research a state constitutional right, and endorsed $3 billion in bond sales for 10 years to cement the deal. CIRM, the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine created under Proposition 71, has become a world center for stem cell research, and its president is Australian Alan | Trounson, a pioneer in in vitro fertilization. As Proposition 71 approaches its 10-year anniversary, Trounson offers a prognosis. FREE CHECKED BAG * GROUP 1 BOARDING * DOUBLE MILES OPPORTUNITY It's been almost 10 years since California funded — what may be the world's biggest stem cell research | fi | program. What are you up to? i We are working hard to get six or seven projects to clinical trials. We have more than 70 [total] programs moving [toward] clinical trials. It's a lot of work to chaperon. I'll give you three examples: one, linking genetics, or genomics work, to stem cells, integrating the two. We're going to create a center in California that will bring a lot of [genetics] studies and clinical work to a new level. Secondly, we've set up a structure for banking the 3,000 cell lines from "induced pluripotent stem cells” that we turn into the equivalent of embryonic stem cells. We call them IPS cells. You take a skin cell or blood cell and convert it to the equivalent of an embryonic stem cell. We've also taken samples from patients with complex diseases, and we're banking these so scientists can "interrogate" these diseases — like heart disease, Alzheimer's, blindness. We are targeting a range of conditions — autism, cerebral palsy — for which we have scant understanding of causes and major drivers. This is material for long-term research studies. http://www. latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-0529-morrison-trounson-201305... 5/29/2013

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