5- Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine Flashcards
define totipotent stem cells - give an example
can differentiate into any cell type - embryonic and extraembryonic cells
example - cells in the early stages of embryonic development (zygote, first few cells of the morula)
define pluripotent stem cells - give an example
can differentiate into cells of all three germ layers - endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm - but can’t rise to the extraembryonic tissues
example: embryonic stem cells derived form the inner cell mass of the blastocyst
define multipotent stem cells - give an example
can differentiate into a limited range of cell types within a specific tissue or organ system
example: adult stem cells = haemopoietic stem cells in bone marrow give rise to different blood cell types
define oligopotent stem cells - give an example
a type of multipotent stem cell - can differentiate into a limited number of cell types
example: lymphoid progenitor cells in bone marrow that give rise to different types of immune cells within the lymphoid lineage
define unipotent stem cells - give an example
can only differentiate into one specific cell type
example: spermatogonia stem cells in the testes can only differentiate into sperm cells
define a stem cell
an undifferentiated cell of a multicellular organism that can give rise to indefinitely more cells of a cell type through differentiation
what are the two main characteristics of a stem cell?
capable of self-renewal through asymmetric and symmetric division
can differentiate into many different types of specialised cells depending on signals they receive
what are the 3 main sources of stem cells?
adult
embryonic
induced pluripotent
describe adult stem cells - features, functions, sources?
features: rare, tissue-specific and multipotent
function: supply new cells for an organism to grow and replace damaged cells - ability varies with different organs
sources: can be taken from the bone marrow as haemopoietic stem cells or the umbilical cord, though other adult stem cells such as epithelial stem cells exist
describe embryonic stem cells - features, functions, sources?
features: pluripotent, proliferate through multiple rounds of cell division before differentiating and giving rise to one of the 3 germ layers
function: supply all of the cells of the developing embryo
sources: blastocyst inner mass cells
what are the three germ layers, and what do they develop into?
ectoderm, mesoderm, endoderm
ectoderm = nervous, epithelial and sensory tissues
mesoderm = blood and connective tissues, skeletal and cardiac muscle tissue
endoderm = lungs, pancreas, stomach, liver and germ cells
describe induced pluripotent stem cells - features, sources?
features: pluripotent, made in a lab, can be differentiated back into any cell type with exposure to certain signals
sources: differentiated tissues is obtained by skin/ muscle biopsy and reprogrammed by exposure to a specific set of pluripotency factors
list the uses of induced pluripotent cells
differentiated back into healthy cells specific to a patient cell type, reduces chance of rejection for treatment like a graft
cell replacement therapy
cell differentiation studies
disease modelling and drug screening
what is a stem cell niche?
a specialised supportive microenvironment for tissue-specific stem cells, at specific anatomical locations
what are the purposes of a stem cell niche?
interact with stem cells to regulate cell fate
protect them from depletion
protect the host from excessive stem cell proliferation