Spring Lecture Series at the Museum of Science:
Exploring the World of Stem Cells
Embryonic and adult stem cells hold great promise for
harnessing the body’s own ability to regenerate
damaged tissues. Research into these mysterious cells
is also helping scientists advance our understanding
of basic biology. But rarely has a scientific issue
been so hotly debated on every imaginable front, from
family dinner tables to political platforms. What is
the science behind the hype and headlines?
During the 2006 spring lecture series, “Exploring
the World of Stem Cells,” at the Museum of Science,
audience members learned how Whitehead researchers are
using stem cells to answer many of the most fundamental
questions in biomedicine.
March 8, 2006—Nuclear Cloning, Stem Cells and
Therapy: Promise, Problem, Reality
Rudolf Jaenisch, Whitehead Member
As they struggle to grow human embryonic stem cells,
biologists continue to face basic questions about how
these cells work. Scientists are just beginning to work
out the internal programs and external cues that give
stem cells their unique ability to become any other
type of cell, remain indefinitely in the stem-cell state,
and self-renew.
Dr. Rudolf Jaenisch’s main goal is to understand
what scientists call epigenetic regulation of gene expression.
This refers to the biological mechanisms that determine
gene function without altering DNA sequences. In this
discussion, Dr. Jaenisch explained how his lab uncovered
alternative methods to creating embryonic stem cells.
March 15, 2006—The Development of Cancer and
the Role of Cancer Stem Cells in this Process
Robert Weinberg, Whitehead Member
Why is cancer so difficult to treat? The answer may
be found in the cancer stem cell, a concept that scientists
have only recently begun to explore. Now, researchers
are racing to identify stem cells in all different kinds
of tumors, findings which will undoubtedly revolutionize
our understanding of how cancer develops. In this discussion,
Whitehead Member Bob Weinberg explored how researchers
are looking into the origins of the cancer stem cell.
March 22, 2006—Planarians Can Regenerate a New
Head in under a Week. How?
Peter Reddien, Whitehead Associate Member
The human anatomy is no stranger to regeneration. If
you think about all the times you have cut and scraped
your hands, it's amazing how intact they are. Even more
dramatic is the human liver: Remove a chunk and it grows
back. Researchers hope to one day harness the power
of stem cells to regenerate, say, heart tissue, or pancreatic
tissue, or nerve tissue. But at the moment, regeneration
is still one of biology's greatest black boxes. In this
discussion Whitehead scientist Peter Reddien discussed
how he uses the planarian flatworm to study the mystery
of regeneration.
For more information, please contact Amy DiGangi at
digangi@wi.mit.edu
or 617.258.7270.
Last updated Aprl 6, 2006. |