Stem Cells

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Related Pages
Human Embryonic Stem (ES) Cells
Making transgenic animals using embryonic stem cells
Cloning mammals using somatic cell nuclei

Stem cells are cells that divide by mitosis to form either

How the choice is made is still unknown. However, several genes have been found whose activity prevents a daughter cell from differentiating.

Several adjectives are used to describe the developmental potential of stem cells; that is, the number of different kinds of differentiated cell that they can become.
  1. Totipotent cells. In mammals, totipotent cells have the potential to become

    The only totipotent cells are the fertilized egg and the first 4 or so cells produced by its cleavage (as shown by the ability of mammals to produce identical twins, triplets, etc.).

    In mammals, the expression totipotent stem cells is a misnomer — totipotent cells cannot make more of themselves.

  2. Pluripotent stem cells. These are true stem cells, with the potential to make any differentiated cell in the body (but probably not those of the placenta which is derived from the trophoblast).

    Three types of pluripotent stem cells have been found

    All three of these types of pluripotent stem cells

    In mice and rats, embryonic stem cells can also:


  3. Multipotent stem cells. These are true stem cells but can only differentiate into a limited number of types. For example, the bone marrow contains multipotent stem cells that give rise to all the cells of the blood but not to other types of cells. [Discussion]

    Multipotent stem cells are found in adult animals; perhaps most organs in the body (e.g., brain, liver) contain them where they can replace dead or damaged cells. These adult stem cells may also be the cells that — when one accumulates sufficient mutations — produce a clone of cancer cells.

Using Stem Cells for Human Therapy

The Dream

Many medical problems arise from damage to differentiated cells.

Examples:

The great developmental potential of stem cells has created intense research into enlisting them to aid in replacing the lost cells of such disorders.

While some success has been achieved with laboratory animals, not much has yet been achieved with humans.

Two exceptions:

The Immunological Problems

So one major problem that must be solved before human stem cell therapy becomes a reality is the threat of rejection of the transplanted cells by the host's immune system (if the stem cells are allografts; that is, come from a genetically-different individual).
Link to discussions of

A Solution?

One way to avoid the problem of rejection is to use stem cells that are genetically identical to the host.

This is already possible in the rare situations when the patient has healthy stem cells in an undamaged part of the body (like the stem cells being used to replace damaged corneas).

But even where no "autologous" stems cells are available, there may be a solution: using somatic-cell nuclear transfer .

In this technique,

  1. An egg has its own nucleus removed and replaced by
  2. a nucleus taken from a somatic (e.g., skin) cell of the donor.
  3. The now-diploid egg is allowed to develop in culture to the blastocyst stage when
  4. embryonic stem cells can be harvested and grown up in culture.
  5. When they have acquired the desired properties, they can be implanted in the donor with no fear of rejection.
Using this procedure it now possible to not only grow blastocysts but even have these go on to develop into adult animals — cloning. [Link to discussions of cloning amphibians and some mammals: sheep (Dolly), cows, mice and others.] Until recently SCNT has not worked for primates (which we are). However, in the 11 November 2007 issue of Science, researchers in Oregon reported success with steps 1–4 in rhesus monkeys.

Their procedure:

While their rate of success simply producing ES cells was low, for the first time there is now a probability of being able to apply the procedure to humans. However, the goal for humans should be limited to developing the formation of patient-specific cells that

However, there are still questions with the method that must be answered.

Questions that Remain to be Answered

Possible Solutions to the Ethical Controversy

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells)

Perhaps the most promising alternative to the use of embryonic stem cells in human therapy are recently-developed methods of genetically reprogramming the nuclei of differentiated adult cells into a pluripotent state.

Therapy with iPS cells has already been demonstrated in mice. The Jaenisch lab in Cambridge, MA reported (in Science, 21 December 2007) that they had successfully treated knock-in mice that make sickle-cell hemoglobin with the human βS genes (and show many of the signs of sickle-cell disease in humans) by

The result: all the signs of sickle-cell disease (e.g., anemia) in the treated animals showed marked improvement.

Let us hope that what works in mice can someday be developed into a safe therapy that will work in humans.

Update. The Jaenisch lab reported in the 6 March 2009 issue of Cell that they have succeeded in making iPS cells (they call them hiPSCs) from fibroblasts taken from patients with Parkinson's disease. The cells were then differentiated into dopamine-releasing cells — the cells lacking in this disease. What is particularly exciting is that they accomplished this after using the Cre-lox system to remove all the genes (e.g., SOX2, OCT4, KLF4) needed for reprogramming the fibroblasts to an embryonic-stem-cell-like condition.
Since that report, other laboratories — using other methods — have also created iPS cells from which all foreign DNA (vector and transgenes) has been removed. Not only should such cells be safer to use in therapy, but these results show that the stimulus to reprogram a differentiated cell into a pluripotent state need only be transitory.

Other approaches being explored

Applied to humans, none of the above procedures would involve the destruction of a potential human life.


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7 September 2009