1. Transdifferentiation—Changing Cell Identity
- Author
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Judith Staerk, Safak Caglayan, Theresa D. Ahrens, and Artur Cieślar-Pobuda
- Subjects
medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cellular differentiation ,Transdifferentiation ,Cell ,medicine ,Translational medicine ,Identity (social science) ,Epigenetics ,Signal transduction ,Stem cell ,Biology ,Cell biology - Abstract
Differentiation of stem cells into specific cell-types and tissues is tightly controlled by activation of signaling pathways, as well as epigenetic and genetic changes. Under normal circumstances, cell differentiation is stable and irreversible. However, it has been observed that during stress conditions such as wounding a cell’s identity can change. The process in which differentiated cells directly switch their identity without going through a stem-cell like state is called “transdifferentiation.” This chapter gives an overview about in vivo and in vitro transdifferentiation, the underlying mechanisms, and future perspectives for translational medicine.
- Published
- 2019
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