The round triggered complaints about irregularities, unfairness, score manipulation and the role of its then president, Alan Trounson. The $40 million, at the time the largest single research award by the agency, was ultimately divided three ways and now has been spent.
The California Stem Cell Report queried the agency this week about the award, its status and results. Here is the response in Q&A format.
Q: How was the $40 million shared and with which institutions?
A: The genomics grant was split into three awards: $22.7M to Stanford (GC1R-06673-A), $13.2M to the Salk Institute (GC1R-06673-B), $4M to UC Santa Cruz (GC1R-06673-C). (The application numbers carry links to the progress reports on the CIRM website.)
- 60 publications connected to CESCG funding
- 10 data analysis/visualization tools created
- 1 new sequencing technique developed
- 300 new iPSC lines created
- Central online data hub created with standard metadata, analysis pipelines, restricted access
- Data repository of human single cell global transcription in heart, pancreas, blood, brain, brain
- 84TB data generated from sequencing activities across projects
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Read all about California's stem cell agency, including Proposition 14, in David Jensen's new book. Buy it on Amazon: California's Great Stem Cell Experiment: Inside a $3 Billion Search for Stem Cell Cures. Click here for more information on the author.
