The Center for Cell-based Therapy (CTC) is made up of a group of researchers of USP and of the Regional Blood Center of Ribeirão Preto who are interested in understanding the biology of stem cells, as well as in developing new technology for their use in the treatment of diseases. The group of researchers engages physicians, biologists, biomedical professionals, pharmacists, and veterinarians, among others, that worked together since 2000.
The researchers at CTC were responsible for the generation of the first embryonic stem cell line in Brazil and produced one of the first bovine and ovine clones in the country.
In the laboratory, CTC researchers have an interest in signaling pathways of mammalian and human embryonic stem cells, in animal and human adult cells reprogramming to the embryonic state of pluripotency (iPS cells) and in the functioning of adult stem cells, such as hematopoietic, mesenchymal and cancer stem cells.
From stem cells derived from healthy people, CTC scientists investigate ways of producing blood components as an alternative source of blood transfusion. In the laboratory, other researchers use iPS cells derived from patients with blood disorders to better understand how these diseases happen and how they could be prevented or better treated.
In the clinical area, researcher-physicians develop new methods of diagnosis and new treatment for leukemia, and also use new stem cells, like mesenchymal stem cells, for the treatment of many diseases, such as diabetes mellitus, systemic sclerosis, and aplastic anemia. CTC relies upon laboratories of cell and molecular biology and cell culture and inpatient units of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in Ribeirão Preto, Pirassununga, and São Paulo.
Research conducted within the Cell Therapy Center, USP (CTC) as to bring benefits to Brazilian society the possibility of obtaining more efficient medications, developed with Brazilian technology.
Among the advances made, in the past few years, divulged by the press and scientific journals, we highlight the development of a platform for expanding genetically modified T cells for treating patients with leukemia and lymphomas; the discovery of the onset of X chromosome inactivation during human embryonic development; the advances in the treatment of systemic and multiple sclerosis; the new perspectives on fighting one of the most aggressive types of brain tumor, astrocytoma; the inhibition of melanoma cells in culture; studies on telomeres; and the formation of a cell bank with the genetics of the Brazilian population.
2023-10-18
Opened in 2022 with FAPESP’s support, Nutera is Latin America’s first cellular product manufacturing plant. It is run by researchers from Butantan Institute and the University of São Paulo’s Ribeirão Preto Blood Center, and could become a supplier to the SUS, Brazil’s public healthcare network.
2022-12-21
The dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 variant substitution in the town where a clinical trial of vaccination effectiveness was conducted matched the pattern seen elsewhere in the country, but most cases were mild. The researchers analyzed 4,375 whole genomes of the virus.
2022-07-06
Research that can increase Brazil’s access to CAR T-cell therapy, an increasingly important strategy for treating cancer, is under way at the University of São Paulo’s Center for Cell-Based Therapy (CTC) in Ribeirão Preto, and the Butantan Institute.
2022-02-23
Patients submitted to a procedure that “resets” the immune system were tracked for a year by scientists at a FAPESP-supported research center. Their clinical improvement correlated with renewal of a group of defense cells known as B lymphocytes.
2021-08-18
A study conducted by researchers at the Center for Cell-Based Therapy in São Paulo state, Brazil, identified a genetic signature that can be used to predict whether patients should be submitted to radiation therapy.
2021-01-20
Pro-Vaccine Union, an initiative of the University of São Paulo in partnership with other organizations including Research, Innovation and Dissemination Centers funded by FAPESP, is monitoring anti-vaccine groups on Facebook in an effort to understand the workings of the social media ecosystem that spreads disinformation.