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Journal ArticleDOI

Stem cells: attributes, cycles, spirals, pitfalls and uncertainties. Lessons for and from the crypt.

Christopher S Potten, +1 more
- 01 Dec 1990 - 
- Vol. 110, Iss: 4, pp 1001-1020
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TLDR
A novel concept to describe structured cell populations in tissues involving stem cells, transit cells and mature cells is attempted, based on the primary assumption that the proliferation and differentiation/maturation processes are in principle independent entities in the sense that each may proceed without necessarily affecting the other.
Abstract
We consider some of the problems involved in current discussions on stem cells in adult mammalian tissues. The present concepts involve a number of pitfalls, weaknesses and logical, semantic and classification problems. This indicates the necessity for new and well-defined concepts that are amenable to experimental analysis. One of the major difficulties in considering stem cells is that they are defined in terms of their functional capabilities which can only be assessed by testing the abilities of the cells, which itself may alter their characteristics during the assay procedure: a situation similar to the uncertainty principle in physics. The terms that describe stem cell functions are often not well defined and are used loosely, which can lead to confusion. If such context-dependent interactions exist between the manipulation and measurement process and the challenged stem cells, the question of, for example, the number of stem cells, in a tissue has to be posed in a new way. Rather than obtaining a single number one might end up with various different numbers under different circumstances, all being complementary. This might suggest that stemness is not a property but a spectrum of capabilities from which to choose. This concept might facilitate a reconciliation between the different and sometimes opposing experimental results. Given certain experimental evidence, we have attempted to provide a novel concept to describe structured cell populations in tissues involving stem cells, transit cells and mature cells. It is based on the primary assumption that the proliferation and differentiation/maturation processes are in principle independent entities in the sense that each may proceed without necessarily affecting the other. Stem cells may divide without maturation while cells approaching functional competence may mature but do not divide. In contrast, transit cells divide and mature showing intermediate properties between stem cells and mature functional cells. The need to describe this transition process and the variable coupling between proliferation and maturation leads us to formulate a spiral model of cell and tissue organisation. This concept is illustrated for the intestinal epithelium. It is concluded that the small intestinal crypts contain 4-16 actual stem cells in steady state but up to 30-40 potential stem cells (clonogenic cells) which may take over stem cell properties following perturbations. This implies that transit cells can under certain circumstances behave like actual stem cells while they undergo maturation under other conditions. There is also evidence that the proliferation and differentiation/maturation processes are subject to controls that ultimately lead to a change in the spiral trajectories.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation and Characterization of Tumorigenic, Stem-like Neural Precursors from Human Glioblastoma

TL;DR: It is reported that, unlike other brain cancers, the lethal glioblastoma multiforme contains neural precursors endowed with all of the critical features expected from neural stem cells.
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Tie2/Angiopoietin-1 Signaling Regulates Hematopoietic Stem Cell Quiescence in the Bone Marrow Niche

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that HSCs expressing the receptor tyrosine kinase Tie2 are quiescent and antiapoptotic, and comprise a side-population (SP) of H SCs, which adhere to osteoblasts (OBs) in the BM niche.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stem Cells and Niches: Mechanisms That Promote Stem Cell Maintenance throughout Life

TL;DR: Niches are local tissue microenvironments that maintain and regulate stem cells that are key to the regulation of homeostasis and likely contribute to aging and tumorigenesis when altered during adulthood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intestinal crypt homeostasis results from neutral competition between symmetrically dividing Lgr5 stem cells

TL;DR: Quantitative analysis shows that stem cell turnover follows a pattern of neutral drift dynamics, consistent with a model in which the resident stem cells double their numbers each day and stochastically adopt stem or TA fates.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Direct Measurement of the Radiation Sensitivity of Normal Mouse Bone Marrow Cells

TL;DR: Counts of macroscopic splenic colonies were used to obtain an estimate of the radiation sensitivity of normal mouse bone marrow progenitor cells.
Journal Article

Cell cycle analysis of a cell proliferation-associated human nuclear antigen defined by the monoclonal antibody Ki-67.

TL;DR: The data suggest that the early stages of mitogen stimulation represent initial sequences of proliferation and not parts of the cell cycle, and immunostaining with monoclonal antibody Ki-67 provides a reliable means of rapidly evaluating the growth fraction of normal and neoplastic human cell populations.
Journal Article

The relationship between the spleen colony-forming cell and the haemopoietic stem cell

Raymond Schofield
- 01 Jan 1978 - 
TL;DR: Several experimental findings that are inconsistent with the view that the spleen colony-forming cell (CFU-S) is the primary haemopoietic stem cell are reviewed and a hypothesis is proposed in which the stem cell is seen in association with other cells which determine its behaviour.
Journal ArticleDOI

G1 events and regulation of cell proliferation.

TL;DR: This work has shown that switches in and out of G1 are the main determinants of post-embryonic cell proliferation rate and are defectively controlled in cancer cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Origin, differentiation and renewal of the four main epithelial cell types in the mouse small intestine. V. Unitarian Theory of the origin of the four epithelial cell types.

TL;DR: It is concluded that crypt-base columnar cells transform into cells of these four types and, therefore, behave as the stem cells of the epithelium and support the Unitarian Theory of epithelial cell formation in the small intestine.
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