Cort
Phoenix Rising Founder
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One thing this article tells me is that whatever you do not, DO NOT get on Trine Tsoudero's bad side....Whew!
http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/ct-met-chronic-fatigue-xmrv-20110317,0,6116823.story?page=1
The key thing, though, is the startling comment from Silverman, the researcher who discovered XMRV...that his lab or one close to it - did use 22RV1 at one time, contrary to previous reports.
Possible Smoking Gun - That does potentially set up a straight line from his lab to the WPI...It's still circumstantial but if he passed them samples or reagents or whatever....he could have passed them XRMV as well. In this scenario the WPI didn't do anything wrong - they didn't contaminate anything - XMRV was passed from him to them and he got it from 22RV1.
Well see how it turns out. There is no smoking gun right now - just the possibility of one. Just because he has 22RV1 in his lab doesn't mean XMRV jumped into his prostate tissues - lots of labs have 22RV1 cell lines. If it got into his tissues a good question would be why it got into his and not other labs. Lot's of if's.
It may be important to determine what, if any materials he shared with the WPI and when he shared them.
We'll know where he's really at when he comes out with whatever paper he comes out with but he's being very honest right now...He is the guy that started this after all.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/health/ct-met-chronic-fatigue-xmrv-20110317,0,6116823.story?page=1
The key thing, though, is the startling comment from Silverman, the researcher who discovered XMRV...that his lab or one close to it - did use 22RV1 at one time, contrary to previous reports.
Possible Smoking Gun - That does potentially set up a straight line from his lab to the WPI...It's still circumstantial but if he passed them samples or reagents or whatever....he could have passed them XRMV as well. In this scenario the WPI didn't do anything wrong - they didn't contaminate anything - XMRV was passed from him to them and he got it from 22RV1.
Well see how it turns out. There is no smoking gun right now - just the possibility of one. Just because he has 22RV1 in his lab doesn't mean XMRV jumped into his prostate tissues - lots of labs have 22RV1 cell lines. If it got into his tissues a good question would be why it got into his and not other labs. Lot's of if's.
It may be important to determine what, if any materials he shared with the WPI and when he shared them.
We'll know where he's really at when he comes out with whatever paper he comes out with but he's being very honest right now...He is the guy that started this after all.
Cancer biologist Robert Silverman, a key researcher at Cleveland Clinic's Lerner Research Institute who worked on studies that linked XMRV to chronic fatigue syndrome and prostate cancer, told the Tribune his lab had stored a cell line known to harbor XMRV and he was working to determine if contamination occurred. Virologists who have examined work by Silverman and others have raised serious questions about contamination, an unfortunate but not unusual mishap in the field.
"I am concerned about lab contamination, despite our best efforts to avoid it," Silverman wrote in an e-mail, adding that similar cell lines "are in many, many labs around the world. Contamination could come from any one of a number of different sites."
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The viruses, according to research Pathak presented at the Boston conference, recombined in a cell line called 22RV1 to create a new retrovirus — XMRV — sometime in the 1990s. The work is in the publication process.
That widely used cell line had been stored in Silverman's lab before he found evidence of the retrovirus in the prostate tissue of patients with a form of prostate cancer.
"22RV1 cells were once previously (more than a year earlier) grown in my lab but were being stored in a liquid nitrogen freezer at the time, and not the same freezer used to store prostate tissues," Silverman wrote in an e-mail. "At the time it was unknown that 22RV1 cells were infected with XMRV."
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Scientists have been reluctant to shut the door completely on the possibility that XMRV really is tied to human disease. Some questions remain unanswered, said Racaniello, of Columbia University. "I don't think it is time to put a lid on it," he said. "You have to carry the whole thing to its conclusion."
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