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Holly Wobma

Holly completed an MD-PhD at Columbia University in New York during which she conducted graduate training in the lab of Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic and helped co-found a cell therapy company called Immplacate. She will soon be starting (June 2019) as a pediatric resident at the Boston Combined Residency Program and is interested in developing and translating cell and gene therapies for pediatric disease.

Posts by: Holly


3D patterning of blood vessels: Creating a fertile landscape for engineered tissues

Author: Holly Wobma, 05/22/13

Nepalese terraces. Photo: strudelt via Flickr . Picture traveling back in time to an era before cell phones (*shudder*). Before radios. Before germ theory. In fact, try taking yourself back to when written language was first being developed around 6000 BC. It’s hard to imagine. And yet while these societies may have lacked our freeways […]

Oldies but still goodies: how we continue to transform the field of haematopoietic stem cells

Author: Holly Wobma, 04/09/13

“A Rat’s Past Lives, a Giraffe and Bull” depicts the interaction between the extracellular matrix and differentiated hematopoietic stem cells. Image by Elizabeth Cambridge from the Cells I See library . If you Google the term “stem cells”, you will be inundated by search results that range from the expected to the truly bizarre. For […]

Gaining ground on losing pounds: How a little more fat might help combat the obesity crisis

Author: Holly Wobma, 02/05/13

. I am, admittedly, the least ambitious type of gym-goer. I don’t train for marathons. I don’t try to body-build – the bar is set pretty low (and, incidentally, also the resistance!). All I want to accomplish is to get rid of some of my “extra skin” and replace it with muscle. Because let’s face […]

Rejuvenation therapy for our aging T-cells (and what it may mean to cancer treatment)

Author: Holly Wobma, 01/10/13

It is said that with age comes “wisdom”; however, I often think that “exhaustion” might serve as a reasonable substitute. As we deal with life’s stresses, and new hairs sprout of snowy white hues, it is hard not to think of our younger days of freedom and vitality. If I could anthropomorphize a cell, I […]

How to “micro” manage your injured heart

Author: Holly Wobma, 12/12/12

When we accidentally burn ourselves while cooking or nick our fingers on a piece of paper, most of us experience a fleeting moment of irritation but never worry that the wound won’t heal. Our everyday lives have taught us that skin is a tissue with great regenerative capability. Unfortunately, the merits of self-healing seem to […]