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2006 Press Seminar

A path to regenerative medicine: mapping stem cell circuitry
Whitehead Member Richard Young (left)
 [view video 220k]
  Video length: 28:03

Expanding blood stem cells for transplants and gene therapy
Whitehead Member Harvey Lodish (right)
 [view video 220k]
  Video length: 32:11

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Controversy

While millions of patients have great expectations for stem cells, stem cell research raises ethical questions. Unscrupulous researchers, for example, could abuse stem cell technology developed to treat disease for the purpose of creating human clones. Like scientists in general, Whitehead researchers support a ban on such “reproductive” cloning. But they support human therapeutic cloning, which potentially could generate customized cells and tissues.

Stem cell research also raises questions about the fate of human embryos. Embryonic stem cells, taken from a three-day-old pre-embryonic ball of about 100 cells no larger than the tip of a pin, can form virtually any kind of cell type or tissue in the body. But the pre-embryonic ball is typically destroyed when researchers extract stem cells.

Whitehead Member Rudolf Jaenisch has demonstrated a way to generate adult stem cells without destroying a viable embryo in the process, a procedure termed “altered nuclear transfer.” Using a mouse, he created an embryo-like entity that was genetically incapable of implanting in a uterus, and that also had certain structural deficiencies. Although this entity was not a viable embryo, it did yield perfectly healthy embryonic stem cells. If this research is successfully repeated in human cells, it might provide a solution to the ethical debate.

Here is more background on the cloning debate and the controversy surrounding the destruction of potential human life.

Researchers offer proof-of-concept for Altered Nuclear Transfer
Demonstrated in mice, this technique produces embryonic stem cell without destroying a viable embryo.

Human Cloning and Human Rights: Promises and Perils
Rudolf Jaenisch prepared this presentation for a series sponsored by the MIT Program on Human Rights and Justice.

Life, death and stem cells
Here are both sides of the debate on therapeutic cloning.

With respect and conscience
Former Whitehead postdoctoral fellow Willy Lensch believes stem cell research can benefit those suffering with disease while properly addressing ethical concerns about human life in its earliest forms.


A new technique for creating stem cells may ease ethical concerns
Examines pioneering work by Whitehead Member Rudolf Jaenisch
From NOVA scienceNOW
January 19, 2006
 [view video 220k 56k]
  Video length: 8:00


Stem cells: you can't always get what you want
Rudolf Jaenisch
December 19, 2005
 [view video 220k 56k]
  Video length: 59:43
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