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Inside a Stem Cell Laboratory

January 6, 2005
Ann Parson writer, reporter
Laurance Dahéron research fellow, George Daley's laboratory
William Lensch research fellow, George Daley's laboratory
Paul Lerou research fellow, George Daley's laboratory
Shannon McKinney-Freeman fellow, George Daley's laboratory

Ann Parson, author of the recently published The Proteus Effect: Stem Cells and Their Promise for Medicine, shares some basic information about stem cells and what the future holds for medicines based on them. She is joined by four postdoctoral fellows who work in one of Boston's and the country's leading stem cell research laboratories, that of George Daley, a Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital hematologist and oncologist. Each scientist describes the research project he or she is tackling and how, if successful, their work could lead to significant improvements in current medical practices. With the stem cells of humans finally isolated, researchers are entering a new era of harnessing cells to treat a variety of disorders.

WGBH
Boston Athenaeum
Image of The Proteus Effect: Stem Cells and Their Promise for Medicine
Author: Ann B. Parson
Publisher: Joseph Henry Press (2004)
Binding: Hardcover, 312 pages
Image of Decoding Darkness: The Search for the Genetic Causes of Alzheimer's Disease
Author: Ann B. Parson, Rudolph E. Tanzi
Publisher: Basic Books (2001)
Binding: Paperback, 304 pages