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Stem Cell Basics |
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I. Introduction:
What are stem cells, and why are they important?
Stem cells have
the remarkable potential to develop into many different cell types
in the body during early life and growth. In addition, in many
tissues they serve as a sort of internal repair system, dividing
essentially without limit to replenish other cells as long as the
person or animal is still alive. When a stem cell divides, each new
cell has the potential either to remain a stem cell or become
another type of cell with a more specialized function, such as a
muscle cell, a red blood cell, or a brain cell.
Stem cells are
distinguished from other cell types by two important
characteristics. First, they are unspecialized cells capable of
renewing themselves through cell division, sometimes after long
periods of inactivity. Second, under certain physiologic or
experimental conditions, they can be induced to become tissue- or
organ-specific cells with special functions. In some organs, such
as the gut and bone marrow, stem cells regularly divide to repair
and replace worn out or damaged tissues. In other organs, however,
such as the pancreas and the heart, stem cells only divide under
special conditions.
Until recently,
scientists primarily worked with two kinds of stem cells from
animals and humans: embryonic stem cells
and non-embryonic "somatic" or "adult" stem
cells. The functions and characteristics of these cells
will be explained in this document. Scientists discovered ways to
derive embryonic stem cells from early mouse embryos nearly 30
years ago, in 1981. The detailed study of the biology of mouse stem
cells led to the discovery, in 1998, of a method to derive stem
cells from human embryos and grow the cells in the laboratory.
These cells are called human embryonic stem
cells. The embryos used in these studies were created
for reproductive purposes through in vitro
fertilization procedures. When they were no longer
needed for that purpose, they were donated for research with the
informed consent of the donor. In 2006, researchers made another
breakthrough by identifying conditions that would allow some
specialized adult cells to be "reprogrammed" genetically to
assume a stem cell-like state. This new type of stem cell,
called induced pluripotent stem cells
(iPSCs), will be discussed in a later section of this
document.
Stem cells are
important for living organisms for many reasons. In the 3- to
5-day-old embryo, called a blastocyst, the inner
cells give rise to the entire body of the organism, including all
of the many specialized cell types and organs such as the heart,
lung, skin, sperm, eggs and other tissues. In some adult tissues,
such as bone marrow, muscle, and brain, discrete populations of
adult stem cells generate replacements for cells that are lost
through normal wear and tear, injury, or disease.
Given their unique regenerative abilities, stem cells offer new
potentials for treating diseases such as diabetes, and heart
disease. However, much work remains to be done in the laboratory
and the clinic to understand how to use these cells for
cell-based
therapies to treat disease, which is also referred
to as regenerative or
reparative medicine.
Laboratory studies of stem cells enable scientists to learn
about the cells’ essential properties and what makes them different
from specialized cell types. Scientists are already using stem
cells in the laboratory to screen new drugs and to develop model
systems to study normal growth and identify the causes of birth
defects.
Research on
stem cells continues
to advance knowledge about how an organism develops from a single
cell and how healthy cells replace damaged cells in adult
organisms. Stem cell research is one of the most fascinating areas
of contemporary biology, but, as with many expanding fields of
scientific inquiry, research on stem cells raises scientific
questions as rapidly as it generates new
discoveries. |
II. What are the
unique properties of all stem cells?
Stem cells differ
from other kinds of cells in the body. All stem cells—regardless of
their source—have three general properties: they are capable of
dividing and renewing themselves for long periods; they are
unspecialized; and they can give rise to specialized cell
types.
Stem cells are capable of
dividing and renewing themselves for long periods. Unlike
muscle cells, blood cells, or nerve cells—which do not normally
replicate themselves—stem cells may replicate many times, or
proliferate. A
starting population of stem cells that proliferates for many months
in the laboratory can yield millions of cells. If the resulting
cells continue to be unspecialized, like the parent stem cells, the
cells are said to be capable of long-term
self-renewal.
Scientists are trying to understand two fundamental properties
of stem cells that relate to their long-term self-renewal:
- why can embryonic stem cells proliferate for a
year or more in the laboratory without differentiating, but most
non-embryonic stem
cells cannot; and
- what are the
factors in living organisms that normally regulate stem cell
proliferation and
self-renewal?
Discovering the
answers to these questions may make it possible to understand how
cell proliferation is regulated during normal embryonic development
or during the abnormal cell division that
leads to cancer. Such information would also enable scientists to
grow embryonic and non-embryonic stem cells more efficiently in the
laboratory.
The specific factors
and conditions that allow stem cells to remain unspecialized are of
great interest to scientists. It has taken scientists many years of
trial and error to learn to derive and maintain stem cells in the
laboratory without them spontaneously differentiating into specific
cell types. For example, it took two decades to learn how to grow
human embryonic stem
cells in the laboratory following the development of
conditions for growing mouse stem cells. Therefore,
understanding the signals in a mature organism that cause a stem
cell population to proliferate and remain unspecialized until
the cells are needed. Such information is critical for
scientists to be able to grow large numbers of unspecialized
stem cells in the laboratory for further experimentation.
Stem cells are
unspecialized. One of the fundamental properties of a stem
cell is that it does not have any tissue-specific structures that
allow it to perform specialized functions. For example, a stem cell
cannot work with its neighbors to pump blood through the body (like
a heart muscle cell), and it cannot carry oxygen molecules through
the bloodstream (like a red blood cell). However, unspecialized
stem cells can give rise to specialized cells, including heart
muscle cells, blood cells, or nerve cells.
Stem cells can
give rise to specialized cells. When unspecialized stem cells
give rise to specialized cells, the process is called
differentiation.
While differentiating, the cell usually goes through several
stages, becoming more specialized at each step. Scientists
are just beginning to understand the signals inside and
outside cells that trigger each stem of the differentiation
process. The internal signals are
controlled by a cell's genes, which are
interspersed across long strands of DNA, and carry coded
instructions for all cellular structures and functions. The
external signals for cell differentiation include chemicals
secreted by other cells, physical contact with neighboring
cells, and certain molecules in the microenvironment.
The interaction of signals during differentiation causes the
cell's DNA to acquire epigenetic marks
that restrict DNA expression in the cell and can be passed on
through cell division.
Many questions about stem cell differentiation remain. For
example, are the internal and external signals for cell
differentiation similar for all kinds of stem cells? Can specific
sets of signals be identified that promote differentiation into
specific cell types? Addressing these questions may lead scientists
to find new ways to control stem cell differentiation in the
laboratory, thereby growing cells or tissues that can be used for
specific purposes such as cell-based therapies
or drug screening.
Adult stem cells
typically generate the cell types of the tissue in which they
reside. For example, a blood-forming adult stem cell in the bone
marrow normally gives rise to the many types of blood cells. It is
generally accepted that a blood-forming cell in the bone
marrow—which is called a hematopoietic stem
cell—cannot give rise to the cells of a very different
tissue, such as nerve cells in the brain. Experiments over the last
several years have purported to show that stem cells from one
tissue may give rise to cell types of a completely different
tissue. This remains an area of great debate within the research
community. This controversy demonstrates the challenges of studying
adult stem cells and suggests that additional research using adult
stem cells is necessary to understand their full potential as
future therapies. |
III. What are
embryonic stem cells?
A. What stages of
early embryonic development are important for generating embryonic
stem cells?
Embryonic stem cells,
as their name suggests, are derived from embryos. Most embryonic
stem cells are derived from embryos that develop from eggs that
have been fertilized in vitro—in
an in vitro
fertilization clinic—and then donated for research
purposes with informed consent of the donors. They are not
derived from eggs fertilized in a woman's body. The
embryos from
which human embryonic stem
cells are derived are typically four or five days
old and are a hollow microscopic ball of cells called the
blastocyst. The blastocyst
includes three structures: the trophoblast,
which is the layer of cells that surrounds the blastocoel, a
hollow cavity inside the blastocyst; and the inner cell mass,
which is a group of cells at one end of the blastocoel that
develop into the embryo proper.
B. How are embryonic stem cells grown in the laboratory?
Growing cells in the
laboratory is known as cell culture. Human
embryonic stem cells are isolated by transferring the
inner cell mass
into a plastic laboratory culture dish that contains a
nutrient broth known as culture medium.
The cells divide and spread over the surface of the dish. The
inner surface of the culture dish is typically coated with
mouse embryonic skin cells that have been treated so they
will not divide. This coating layer of cells is called a
feeder layer.
The mouse cells in the bottom of the culture dish provide the
inner cell mass cells a sticky surface to which they can
attach. Also, the feeder cells release nutrients into the
culture medium. Researchers have devised ways to grow
embryonic stem cells without mouse feeder cells. This is a
significant scientific advance because of the risk that
viruses or other macromolecules in the mouse cells may be
transmitted to the human cells.
The process of
generating an embryonic stem cell line is somewhat inefficient, so
lines are not produced each time an inner cell mass is placed into
a culture dish. However, if the plated inner cell mass cells
survive, divide and multiply enough to crowd the dish, they are
removed gently and plated into several fresh culture dishes. The
process of re-plating or subculturing the cells is repeated many
times and for many months. Each cycle of subculturing the
cells is referred to as a passage. Once the
cell line is established, the original cells yield millions of
embryonic stem cells. Embryonic stem cells that have proliferated
in cell culture for six or more months without differentiating, are
pluripotent, and
appear genetically normal are referred to as an embryonic
stem cell line. At any stage in the process, batches of
cells can be frozen and shipped to other laboratories for further
culture and experimentation.
C. What laboratory tests are used to identify embryonic stem
cells?
At various points
during the process of generating embryonic stem cell lines,
scientists test the cells to see whether they exhibit the
fundamental properties that make them embryonic stem cells. This
process is called characterization.
Scientists who study human embryonic stem cells have not yet
agreed on a standard battery of tests that measure the cells'
fundamental properties. However, laboratories that grow human
embryonic stem cell lines use several kinds of tests,
including:
- Growing and subculturing the stem cells for many months. This
ensures that the cells are capable of long-term growth and
self-renewal. Scientists inspect the cultures through a microscope
to see that the cells look healthy and remain undifferentiated.
- Using specific techniques to determine the presence of
transcription factors that are typically produced by
undifferentiated cells. Two of the most important
transcription factors are Nanog and Oct4. Transcription factors
help turn genes on and off at the
right time, which is an important part of the processes of cell
differentiation
and embryonic development. In this case, both Oct 4 and Nanog are
associated with maintaining the stem cells in an undifferentiated
state, capable of self-renewal.
- Using specific techniques to determine the presence of
paricular cell surface markers that are typically produced by
undifferentiated cells.
- Examining the
chromosomes under a microscope. This is a method to assess whether
the chromosomes are damaged or if the number of chromosomes has
changed. It does not detect genetic mutations in the cells.
- Determining whether
the cells can be re-grown, or subcultured, after freezing, thawing,
and re-plating.
- Testing whether
the human embryonic stem cells are pluripotent by 1) allowing the
cells to differentiate spontaneously in cell culture; 2)
manipulating the cells so they will differentiate to form cells
characteristic of the three germ layers; or 3) injecting the cells
into a mouse with a suppressed immune system to test for the
formation of a benign tumor called a teratoma. Since the
mouse’s immune system is suppressed, the injected human stem
cells are not rejected by the mouse immune system and scientists
can observe growth and differentiation of the human stem cells.
Teratomas typically contain a mixture of many differentiated or
partly differentiated cell types—an indication that the
embryonic stem cells are capable of differentiating into
multiple cell types.
D. How are
embryonic stem cells stimulated to
differentiate? |
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![Directed differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells. This figure is a flow chart showing the steps scientists take to isolate and differentiate mouse embryonic stem cells. A mouse blastocyst is shown in the upper left, with its inner cell mass (ICM) labeled. Arrows indicate removal of the ICM and plating in a tissue culture dish, labeled as “undifferentiated embryonic stem cells.” The next arrow indicates the passage of time and shows that the cells in the plate have now become embryoid bodies. From this culture dish, an arrow indicates that the next step is “induce initial differentiation and select precursors.” Next, two arrows show two possible fates, and the label underneath indicates that the scientists “expand precursors.” The two possible precursor types are “neuronal precursors” or “pancreatic precursors.” The final step indicates “complete differentiation to generate functional cells.” The bottom left shows a fluorescently labeled microscope image of “dopamine- and serotonin-secreting neurons” and the bottom right shows a fluorescently labeled microscope image of “insulin-secreting pancreatic islet-like clusters.” - What are embryonic stem cells? [Stem Cell Information] - Mozilla Firefox](http://www.eTagLive.com/Attachments/2/3/3/or_233883fb-5a08-43a1-a4ab-3a389b07afd9.jpg) |
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Figure 1. Directed
differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells. Click
here for larger image. (© 2001 Terese
Winslow) |
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As long as the
embryonic stem cells in culture are grown under appropriate
conditions, they can remain undifferentiated (unspecialized). But
if cells are allowed to clump together to form embryoid bodies, they
begin to differentiate spontaneously. They can form muscle cells,
nerve cells, and many other cell types. Although spontaneous
differentiation is a good indication that a culture of embryonic
stem cells is healthy, it is not an efficient way to produce
cultures of specific cell types.
So, to generate
cultures of specific types of differentiated cells—heart muscle
cells, blood cells, or nerve cells, for example—scientists try to
control the differentiation of embryonic stem cells. They change
the chemical composition of the culture medium, alter the surface
of the culture dish, or modify the cells by inserting specific
genes. Through years of experimentation, scientists have
established some basic protocols or "recipes" for the
directed differentiation of
embryonic stem cells into some specific cell types (Figure 1). (For
additional examples of directed differentiation of embryonic
stem cells, refer to the NIH stem cell reports available at
/info/2006report/ and
/info/2001report/2001report.htm.)
If scientists can
reliably direct the differentiation of embryonic stem cells into
specific cell types, they may be able to use the resulting,
differentiated cells to treat certain diseases in the future.
Diseases that might be treated by transplanting cells generated
from human embryonic stem cells include
Parkinson's disease, diabetes, traumatic spinal cord injury,
Duchenne's muscular
dystrophy, heart disease, and vision and hearing
loss. |
IV. What are adult
stem cells?
An adult stem cell
is thought to be an undifferentiated cell,
found among differentiated cells in a tissue or organ that can
renew itself and can differentiate to yield some or all of the
major specialized cell types of the tissue or organ. The primary
roles of adult stem cells in a
living organism are to maintain and repair the tissue in which they
are found. Scientists also use the term somatic stem cell
instead of adult stem cell, where somatic refers to cells of the
body (not the germ cells, sperm or eggs). Unlike embryonic stem
cells, which are defined by their origin (the inner cell mass of the
blastocyst), the
origin of adult stem cells in some mature tissues is still under
investigation.
Research on adult stem cells has generated a great deal of
excitement. Scientists have found adult stem cells in many more
tissues than they once thought possible. This finding has led
researchers and clinicians to ask whether adult stem cells could be
used for transplants. In fact, adult hematopoietic, or
blood-forming, stem cells from bone marrow have been used in
transplants for 40 years. Scientists now have evidence that stem
cells exist in the brain and the heart. If the differentiation of
adult stem cells can be controlled in the laboratory, these cells
may become the basis of transplantation-based therapies.
The history of
research on adult stem cells began about 50 years ago. In the
1950s, researchers discovered that the bone marrow contains at
least two kinds of stem cells. One population, called
hematopoietic stem
cells, forms all the types of blood cells in the
body. A second population, called bone marrow stromal stem
cells (also called mesenchymal stem cells, or
skeletal stem cells by some), were discovered a few years
later. These non-hematopoietic stem cells make up a small
proportion of the stromal cell
population in the bone marrow, and can generate bone,
cartilage, fat, cells that support the formation of blood,
and fibrous connective tissue.
In the 1960s, scientists who were studying rats discovered two
regions of the brain that contained dividing cells that ultimately
become nerve cells. Despite these reports, most scientists believed
that the adult brain could not generate new nerve cells. It was not
until the 1990s that scientists agreed that the adult brain does
contain stem cells that are able to generate the brain's three
major cell types—astrocytes and
oligodendrocytes,
which are non-neuronal cells, and neurons, or nerve
cells.
A. Where are adult stem cells found, and what do they normally
do?
Adult stem cells have been identified in many organs and
tissues, including brain, bone marrow, peripheral blood, blood
vessels, skeletal muscle, skin, teeth, heart, gut, liver, ovarian
epithelium, and testis. They are thought to reside in a specific
area of each tissue (called a "stem cell niche"). In many tissues,
current evidence suggests that some types of stem cells are
pericytes, cells that compose the outermost layer of small blood
vessels. Stem cells may remain quiescent (non-dividing) for long
periods of time until they are activated by a normal need for more
cells to maintain tissues, or by disease or tissue injury.
Typically, there is a very small number of stem cells in each
tissue, and once removed from the body, their capacity to divide is
limited, making generation of large quantities of stem cells
difficult. Scientists in many laboratories are trying to find
better ways to grow large quantities of adult stem cells in
cell culture and
to manipulate them to generate specific cell types so they can be
used to treat injury or disease. Some examples of potential
treatments include regenerating bone using cells derived from bone
marrow stroma, developing insulin-producing cells for type 1
diabetes, and repairing damaged heart muscle following a heart
attack with cardiac muscle cells.
B. What tests are used for identifying adult stem cells?
Scientists often use one or more of the following methods to
identify adult stem cells: (1) label the cells in a living tissue
with molecular markers and then determine the specialized cell
types they generate; (2) remove the cells from a living animal,
label them in cell culture, and transplant them back into another
animal to determine whether the cells replace (or "repopulate")
their tissue of origin.
Importantly, it must
be demonstrated that a single adult stem cell can generate a line
of genetically identical cells that then gives rise to all the
appropriate differentiated cell types of the tissue. To confirm
experimentally that a putative adult stem cell is indeed a stem
cell, scientists tend to show either that the cell can give rise to
these genetically identical cells in culture, and/or that a
purified population of these candidate stem cells can repopulate or
reform the tissue after transplant into an animal.
C. What is known
about adult stem cell differentiation? |
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![“Hematopoietic and stromal cell differentiation.” The figure shows a long bone, with marrow in its center and an enlargement of the bone/marrow interface in a boxed inset, with cell types identified. Cell types shown include the osteocytes embedded in the noncellular bone matrix, the osteoclast, pericytes around tiny blood vessels, adipocytes, and stromal cells. Using arrows, the artist has drawn illustrations of the lineages of marrow and stromal cells. Marrow lineage: a hematopoietic stem cell gives rise to a multipotent stem cell, which can divide to produce one of two possible cell types: (1) a myeloid progenitor cell, which is capable of producing neutrophils, basophils, eosinophils, monocytes/macrophages, platelets, and red blood cells or (2) a lymphoid progenitor cell, which gives rise to natural killer (NK) cells, T lymphocytes, and B lymphocytes. Stromal lineage: a stromal stem cell gives rise to bone cells, including pre-osteoblasts, osteoblasts, lining cells, and osteocytes. The artist has also indicated two other cell types that the bone marrow may be capable of producing: skeletal muscle stem cells, and hepatocyte stem cells. Each possible lineage is followed by a question mark, to indicate that scientists do not agree whether or not bone marrow is capable of producing these two cell types. - What are adult stem cells? [Stem Cell Information] - Mozilla Firefox](http://www.eTagLive.com/Attachments/2/2/5/or_225abea1-00ff-4e0d-a760-9ab61d9d28d9.jpg) |
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Figure 2. Hematopoietic and
stromal stem cell differentiation. Click
here for larger image. (© 2001 Terese
Winslow) |
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As indicated above,
scientists have reported that adult stem cells occur in many
tissues and that they enter normal differentiation
pathways to form the specialized cell types of the tissue in
which they reside.
Normal differentiation
pathways of adult stem cells. In a living animal, adult stem
cells are available to divide, when needed, and can give rise to
mature cell types that have characteristic shapes and specialized
structures and functions of a particular tissue. The following are
examples of differentiation pathways of adult stem cells
(Figure 2) that
have been demonstrated in vitro or in
vivo.
- Hematopoietic stem
cells give rise to all the types of blood cells: red blood cells, B
lymphocytes, T lymphocytes, natural killer cells, neutrophils,
basophils, eosinophils, monocytes, and macrophages.
- Mesenchymal stem cells
give rise to a variety of cell types: bone cells (osteocytes),
cartilage cells (chondrocytes), fat cells (adipocytes), and other
kinds of connective tissue cells such as those in tendons.
- Neural stem cells in the brain give
rise to its three major cell types: nerve cells (neurons) and two
categories of non-neuronal cells—astrocytes and oligodendrocytes.
- Epithelial stem
cells in the lining of the digestive tract occur in deep crypts and
give rise to several cell types: absorptive cells, goblet cells,
paneth cells, and enteroendocrine cells.
- Skin stem cells
occur in the basal layer of the epidermis and at the base of hair
follicles. The epidermal stem cells give rise to keratinocytes,
which migrate to the surface of the skin and form a protective
layer. The follicular stem cells can give rise to both the hair
follicle and to the epidermis.
Transdifferentiation. A number of experiments have
reported that certain adult stem cell types can differentiate into
cell types seen in organs or tissues other than those expected from
the cells' predicted lineage (i.e., brain stem cells that
differentiate into blood cells or blood-forming cells that
differentiate into cardiac muscle cells, and so forth). This
reported phenomenon is called transdifferentiation.
Although isolated instances of transdifferentiation have been
observed in some vertebrate species, whether this phenomenon
actually occurs in humans is under debate by the scientific
community. Instead of transdifferentiation, the observed instances
may involve fusion of a donor cell with a recipient cell. Another
possibility is that transplanted stem cells are secreting factors
that encourage the recipient's own stem cells to begin the repair
process. Even when transdifferentiation has been detected, only a
very small percentage of cells undergo the process.
In a variation of
transdifferentiation experiments, scientists have recently
demonstrated that certain adult cell types can be "reprogrammed"
into other cell types in vivo using a well-controlled process of
genetic modification (see Section VI for a discussion of the
principles of reprogramming). This strategy may offer a way to
reprogram available cells into other cell types that have been lost
or damaged due to disease. For example, one recent experiment shows
how pancreatic beta cells, the insulin-producing cells that are
lost or damaged in diabetes, could possibly be created by
reprogramming other pancreatic cells. By "re-starting" expression
of three critical beta-cell genes in differentiated adult
pancreatic exocrine cells, researchers were able to create beta
cell-like cells that can secrete insulin. The reprogrammed cells
were similar to beta cells in appearance, size, and shape;
expressed genes characteristic of beta cells; and were able to
partially restore blood sugar regulation in mice whose own beta
cells had been chemically destroyed. While not transdifferentiation
by definition, this method for reprogramming adult cells may be
used as a model for directly reprogramming other adult cell
types.
In addition to reprogramming cells to become a specific cell
type, it is now possible to reprogram adult somatic cells to become
like embryonic stem cells (induced pluripotent stem cells,
iPSCs) through the introduction of embryonic genes.
Thus, a source of cells can be generated that are specific to the
donor, thereby avoiding issues of histocompatibility, if such cells
were to be used for tissue regeneration. However, like embryonic
stem cells, determination of the methods by which iPSCs can be
completely and reproducibly committed to appropriate cell lineages
is still under investigation.
D. What are the key questions about adult stem cells?
Many important questions about adult stem cells remain to be
answered. They include:
- How many kinds of adult stem cells exist, and in which tissues
do they exist?
- How do adult stem cells evolve during development and how are
they maintained in the adult? Are they "leftover" embryonic stem
cells, or do they arise in some other way?
- Why do stem cells remain in an undifferentiated state when all
the cells around them have differentiated? What are the
characteristics of their “niche” that controls their behavior?
- Do adult stem cells have the capacity to transdifferentiate,
and is it possible to control this process to improve its
reliability and efficiency?
- If the beneficial effect of adult stem cell transplantation is
a trophic effect, what are the mechanisms? Is donor cell-recipient
cell contact required, secretion of factors by the donor cell, or
both?
- What are the factors that control adult stem cell proliferation
and differentiation?
- What are the
factors that stimulate stem cells to relocate to sites of injury or
damage, and how can this process be enhanced for better
healing?
|
V. What are the
similarities and differences between embryonic and adult stem
cells?
Human embryonic and adult stem cells each
have advantages and disadvantages regarding potential use for
cell-based regenerative
therapies. One major difference between adult and
embryonic stem cells is their different abilities in the number and
type of differentiated cell types they can become.
Embryonic stem
cells can become all cell types of the body
because they are pluripotent.
Adult stem cells are thought to be limited to differentiating
into different cell types of their tissue of origin.
Embryonic stem cells
can be grown relatively easily in culture. Adult stem cells are
rare in mature tissues, so isolating these cells from an adult
tissue is challenging, and methods to expand their numbers in
cell culture
have not yet been worked out. This is an important distinction, as
large numbers of cells are needed for stem cell replacement
therapies.
Scientists believe
that tissues derived from embryonic and adult stem cells may differ
in the likelihood of being rejected after transplantation. We don't
yet know whether tissues derived from embryonic stem cells would
cause transplant rejection, since the first phase 1 clinical
trial testing the safety of cells derived from hESCS has only
recently been approved by the United States Food and Drug
Administration (FDA).
Adult stem cells,
and tissues derived from them, are currently believed less likely
to initiate rejection after transplantation. This is because a
patient's own cells could be expanded in culture, coaxed into
assuming a specific cell type (differentiation),
and then reintroduced into the patient. The use of adult stem cells
and tissues derived from the patient's own adult stem cells would
mean that the cells are less likely to be rejected by the immune
system. This represents a significant advantage, as immune
rejection can be circumvented only by continuous administration of
immunosuppressive drugs, and the drugs themselves may cause
deleterious side effects |
VI. What are
induced pluripotent stem cells?
Induced pluripotent stem
cells (iPSCs) are adult cells that have been genetically
reprogrammed to an embryonic stem cell–like state by being forced
to express genes and factors important for maintaining the defining
properties of embryonic stem cells. Although these cells meet the
defining criteria for pluripotent stem cells, it is not known if
iPSCs and embryonic stem cells differ in clinically significant
ways. Mouse iPSCs were first reported in 2006, and human iPSCs were
first reported in late 2007. Mouse iPSCs demonstrate important
characteristics of pluripotent stem cells, including expressing
stem cell markers, forming tumors containing cells from all three
germ layers, and being able to contribute to many different tissues
when injected into mouse embryos at a very early stage in
development. Human iPSCs also express stem cell markers and are
capable of generating cells characteristic of all three
germ
layers.
Although additional
research is needed, iPSCs are already useful tools for drug
development and modeling of diseases, and scientists hope to use
them in transplantation medicine. Viruses are currently used to
introduce the reprogramming factors into adult cells, and this
process must be carefully controlled and tested before the
technique can lead to useful treatments for humans. In animal
studies, the virus used to introduce the stem cell factors
sometimes causes cancers. Researchers are currently investigating
non-viral delivery strategies. In any case, this breakthrough
discovery has created a powerful new way to "de-differentiate"
cells whose developmental fates had been previously assumed to be
determined. In addition, tissues derived from iPSCs will be a
nearly identical match to the cell donor and thus probably avoid
rejection by the immune system. The iPSC strategy creates
pluripotent stem cells that, together with studies of other types
of pluripotent stem cells, will help researchers learn how to
reprogram cells to repair damaged tissues in the human
body. |
VII. What are the
potential uses of human stem cells and the obstacles that must be
overcome before these potential uses will be realized?
There are many ways
in which human stem cells can be used in research and the clinic.
Studies of human embryonic stem
cells will yield information about the complex events
that occur during human development. A primary goal of this work is
to identify how undifferentiated stem cells become the
differentiated cells that form the tissues and organs. Scientists
know that turning genes on and off is
central to this process. Some of the most serious medical
conditions, such as cancer and birth defects, are due to abnormal
cell division and differentiation. A
more complete understanding of the genetic and molecular
controls of these processes may yield information about how such
diseases arise and suggest new strategies for therapy.
Predictably controlling cell proliferation and differentiation
requires additional basic research on the molecular and genetic
signals that regulate cell division and specialization. While
recent developments with iPS cells suggest some of the specific
factors that may be involved, techniques must be devised to
introduce these factors safely into the cells and control the
processes that are induced by these factors.
Human stem cells
could also be used to test new drugs. For example, new medications
could be tested for safety on differentiated cells generated from
human pluripotent cell
lines. Other kinds of cell lines are already used in this way.
Cancer cell lines, for example, are used to screen potential
anti-tumor drugs. The availability of pluripotent stem cells would
allow drug testing in a wider range of cell types. However, to
screen drugs effectively, the conditions must be identical when
comparing different drugs. Therefore, scientists will have to be
able to precisely control the differentiation of stem cells into
the specific cell type on which drugs will be tested. Current
knowledge of the signals controlling differentiation falls short of
being able to mimic these conditions precisely to generate pure
populations of differentiated cells for each drug being tested.
Perhaps the most
important potential application of human stem cells is the
generation of cells and tissues that could be used for
cell-based
therapies. Today, donated organs and tissues are
often used to replace ailing or destroyed tissue, but the
need for transplantable tissues and organs far outweighs the
available supply. Stem cells, directed to differentiate into
specific cell types, offer the possibility of a renewable
source of replacement cells and tissues to treat diseases
including Alzheimer's diseases, spinal cord injury, stroke,
burns, heart disease, diabetes, osteoarthritis, and
rheumatoid arthritis. |
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![Heart muscle repair with adult stem cells. This figure is divided into two panels, with each illustrating a possible means by which adult stem cells could help regenerate damaged heart muscle. On the left, a mouse heart is being injected with a syringe of green-labeled adult stem cells. Next, a magnifying glass shows a close-up of the damaged heart muscle cells (greyish-black) next to an area of healthy heart muscle (pink). Arrows indicate that the adult stem cells are intermingling with the heart muscle fibers. On the right, a mouse is shown being injected in the tail blood vessels with a syringe of pink human bone marrow stem cells. The magnifying glass in this panel again shows a close-up of the damaged heart muscle cells (greyish-black) next to an area of healthy heart muscle (pink). The pink human bone marrow stem cells intermingle with the heart muscle fibers and the text indicates that they induce new blood vessel formation in the damaged heart muscle and also cause proliferation of existing heart blood vessels. - What are the potential uses of human stem cells and the obstacles that must be overcome before these potential uses will be realized? [Stem Cell Information] - Mozilla Firefox](http://www.eTagLive.com/Attachments/c/9/9/or_c9910b34-c8d0-4876-943c-df02061e767a.jpg) |
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Figure 3. Strategies to repair heart muscle with
adult stem
cells.
Click here for larger image.
©
2001 Terese Winslow
For example, it may
become possible to generate healthy heart muscle cells in the
laboratory and then transplant those cells into patients with
chronic heart disease. Preliminary research in mice and other
animals indicates that bone marrow stromal cells, transplanted into
a damaged heart, can have beneficial effects. Whether these cells
can generate heart muscle cells or stimulate the growth of new
blood vessels that repopulate the heart tissue, or help via some
other mechanism is actively under investigation. For example,
injected cells may accomplish repair by secreting growth factors,
rather than actually incorporating into the heart. Promising
results from animal studies have served as the basis for a small
number of exploratory studies in humans (for discussion, see
call-out box, "Can Stem Cells Mend a Broken Heart?"). Other recent
studies in cell culture systems
indicate that it may be possible to direct the differentiation of embryonic stem
cells or adult bone marrow cells into heart muscle cells
(Figure
3). |
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Can Stem Cells
Mend a Broken Heart?: Stem Cells for the Future Treatment of Heart
Disease
Cardiovascular
disease (CVD), which includes hypertension, coronary heart disease,
stroke, and congestive heart failure, has ranked as the number one
cause of death in the United States every year since 1900 except
1918, when the nation struggled with an influenza epidemic. Nearly
2600 Americans die of CVD each day, roughly one person every 34
seconds. Given the aging of the population and the relatively
dramatic recent increases in the prevalence of cardiovascular risk
factors such as obesity and type 2 diabetes, CVD will be a
significant health concern well into the 21st century.
Cardiovascular
disease can deprive heart tissue of oxygen, thereby killing cardiac
muscle cells (cardiomyocytes). This loss triggers a cascade of
detrimental events, including formation of scar tissue, an overload
of blood flow and pressure capacity, the overstretching of viable
cardiac cells attempting to sustain cardiac output, leading to
heart failure, and eventual death. Restoring damaged heart muscle
tissue, through repair or regeneration, is therefore a potentially
new strategy to treat heart failure.
The use of embryonic and adult-derived stem cells for cardiac
repair is an active area of research. A number of stem cell types,
including embryonic stem (ES) cells, cardiac stem cells that
naturally reside within the heart, myoblasts (muscle stem cells),
adult bone marrow-derived cells including mesenchymal cells (bone
marrow-derived cells that give rise to tissues such as muscle,
bone, tendons, ligaments, and adipose tissue), endothelial
progenitor cells (cells that give rise to the endothelium, the
interior lining of blood vessels), and umbilical cord blood cells,
have been investigated as possible sources for regenerating damaged
heart tissue. All have been explored in mouse or rat models, and
some have been tested in larger animal models, such as pigs.
A few small studies have also been carried out in humans,
usually in patients who are undergoing open-heart surgery. Several
of these have demonstrated that stem cells that are injected into
the circulation or directly into the injured heart tissue appear to
improve cardiac function and/or induce the formation of new
capillaries. The mechanism for this repair remains controversial,
and the stem cells likely regenerate heart tissue through several
pathways. However, the stem cell populations that have been tested
in these experiments vary widely, as do the conditions of their
purification and application. Although much more research is needed
to assess the safety and improve the efficacy of this approach,
these preliminary clinical experiments show how stem cells may one
day be used to repair damaged heart tissue, thereby reducing the
burden of cardiovascular disease. |
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In people who
suffer from type 1 diabetes, the cells of the pancreas that
normally produce insulin are destroyed by the patient's own immune
system. New studies indicate that it may be possible to direct the
differentiation of human embryonic stem cells in cell culture to
form insulin-producing cells that eventually could be used in
transplantation therapy for persons with diabetes.
To realize the
promise of novel cell-based therapies for such pervasive and
debilitating diseases, scientists must be able to manipulate stem
cells so that they possess the necessary characteristics for
successful differentiation, transplantation, and engraftment. The
following is a list of steps in successful cell-based treatments
that scientists will have to learn to control to bring such
treatments to the clinic. To be useful for transplant purposes,
stem cells must be reproducibly made to:
- Proliferate
extensively and generate sufficient quantities of tissue.
- Differentiate into the desired cell type(s).
- Survive in the
recipient after transplant.
- Integrate into the
surrounding tissue after transplant.
- Function
appropriately for the duration of the recipient's life.
- Avoid harming the
recipient in any way.
Also, to avoid the
problem of immune rejection, scientists are experimenting with
different research strategies to generate tissues that will not be
rejected.
To summarize, stem
cells offer exciting promise for future therapies, but significant
technical hurdles remain that will only be overcome through years
of intensive research. |
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