Mesenchymal stem cells: harnessing cell plasticity to tissue and organ repair |
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Authors: | Zipori Dov |
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Affiliation: | Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, 76100, Israel. dov.zipori@weizmann.ac.il |
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Abstract: | Plastic behavior of cells is a hallmark of embryonic development. The emergence of primary mesenchyme from within the inner cell mass entails the first epithelial-mesenchymal transition step that is then followed by sequential transitions; the formation of new tissues and organs requires transitions from mesenchyme into epithelium and vice versa. Although it is currently believed that in the adult such transitions do not persist, the frequent occurrence of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in various tissues of the adult organisms, and the reported plasticity of such adult mesenchymal cells, raises the question as to whether the frequency of mesenchymal epithelial transitions in the adult have been underestimated. Indeed, adult mesenchymal stem cells have been reported to differentiate in culture into a multitude of mature cell types including epithelial cells. This opens the way to the use of these stem cells for the construction of new tissues and organs for therapeutic purposes, but the question is still open as to whether mesenchymal stem cells transdifferentiate also in vivo. The molecular mechanism that underlies the plasticity of mesenchymal stem cells and their capacity to transdifferentiate is unresolved. We found that these cells have a promiscuous gene expression pattern; mesenchymal cells, whether primary or cloned cell lines, express T cell receptor (TCR) beta and alpha genes, along with other components of the TCR complex. These cells may therefore be in a standby state, in which many gene families are expressed at a low level thereby making the cell readily capable of shifting fates. |
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Keywords: | Mesenchymal stem cells Cell plasticity Tissue and organ repair |
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