Stem-cell “plasticity”: befuddled by the muddle
- 1 May 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Hematology
- Vol. 10 (3) , 208-213
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00062752-200305000-00003
Abstract
In the past 4 years, multiple reports have suggested that stem cells derived from adult tissues can differentiate outside their tissue of origin, challenging long-accepted tenets of developmental biology. This concept of stem-cell "plasticity" has helped to galvanize research on stem cells due to the myriad therapeutic possibilities. However, there are wide discrepancies in the reported frequencies of so-called transdifferentiation events, from recent reports of negative data to reports of the contribution in some tissues and systems reaching as much as 20%. The evidence for and against stem-cell plasticity is reviewed here as well as some of the possible sources of the experimental variation.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Little Evidence for Developmental Plasticity of Adult Hematopoietic Stem CellsScience, 2002
- Cardiomyocytes of Noncardiac Origin in Myocardial Biopsies of Human Transplanted HeartsCirculation, 2002
- Adult hematopoietic stem cells provide functional hemangioblast activity during retinal neovascularizationNature Medicine, 2002
- Evidence for Cardiomyocyte Repopulation by Extracardiac Progenitors in Transplanted Human HeartsCirculation Research, 2002
- Chimerism of the Transplanted HeartNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- Regeneration of ischemic cardiac muscle and vascular endothelium by adult stem cellsJournal of Clinical Investigation, 2001
- Multi-Organ, Multi-Lineage Engraftment by a Single Bone Marrow-Derived Stem CellCell, 2001
- Purified hematopoietic stem cells can differentiate into hepatocytes in vivoNature Medicine, 2000
- Liver from bone marrow in humansHepatology, 2000
- Muscle Regeneration by Bone Marrow-Derived Myogenic ProgenitorsScience, 1998