Stem Cells Flashcards

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1
Q

define stem cells

A

unspecialised cell from the embryo, fetus, or adult

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1
Q

define stem cells

A

unspecialised cell from the embryo, fetus, or adult

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2
Q

what are the key characteristics of all stem cells?

A
  • long-term self-renewal via mitosis
  • has the ability to differentiate to give rise to specialised cells

(large nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio)

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3
Q

what does stem cell potency refer to?

A
  • the range of cell types to which a stem cell can give rise to
  • number of possible developmental pathways
  • differential potential
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4
Q

state the three types of stem cell potency, and the descendent sequence

A

totipotent to pluripotent to multipotent

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5
Q

define totipotent stem cells, and where are they found?

A

can differentiate to give rise all cell types that make up an organism
- zygotic stem cell (first few cells of the fertilised zygote)

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6
Q

define pluripotent stem cells, and where are they found?

A

give rise to three germ layers (mesoderm, endoderm, ectoderm; everything except extra-embryonic membranes)

  • embryonic stem cells (early embryos)
  • from inner cell mass of blastocyst
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7
Q

define multipotent stem cells, and where are they found?

A

differentiate into limited number of cell types: many cell lines within a specific tissue type
- adult stem cells (eg. blood, lymphoid, myeloid)

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8
Q

what are committed cells?

A
  • more limited pathway of development compared to pluripotent
  • destined to produce specific group of cells
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9
Q

what is a precursor or progenitor cell?

A

partly differentiated cells that give rise to differentiated cells (committed)

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10
Q

what are the two types of mitotic division in stem cells?

A
  • symmetric: 2 genetically identical stem
  • asymmetric: 1 stem, 1 committed progenitor
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11
Q

what is the importance of asymmetric mitotic division?

A
  1. preserves population of undifferentiated stem cells
  2. steadily produces stream of differentiated cells
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12
Q

what are the sources of embryonic stem cells in humans?

A
  1. inner cell mass of blastocyst (when zygote is implanted)
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13
Q

what are six defining properties of an embryonic stem cell?

A
  1. can undergo long-term mitotic self-renewal without differentiation
  2. maintains stable, diploid, normal chromosome complement
  3. can give rise to three germ layers (ecto, endo, meso)
  4. can develop into all fetal tissues
  5. clonogenic (makes genetically identical cells)
  6. easy to get pure and mass-cultivate
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14
Q

what are the two primary roles of adult / somatic stem cells?

A
  1. maintain / repair tissues
  2. replace injured or diseased cells
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15
Q

what are four defining properties of an adult stem cell?

A
  • long-term mitotic self-renewal
  • can give rise to fully-differentiated cells
  • clonogenic
  • full chromosome complement
16
Q

what are the three lineages in hematopoiesis?

A
  1. lymphoid: produces B + T lymphocytes
  2. myeloid: rest of WBCs (eg. monocytes, mast, leukocytes)
  3. erythroid: red blood cells / erythrocytes
17
Q

what are the four principles of bioethics?

A
  1. respect for persons
  2. maximising benefits, minimising harms
  3. justice
  4. care
18
Q

what are the arguments for and against therapeutic cloning?

A

for:
- huge benefits outweigh wrong-doing

against:
- devalue human life