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Integrating physiological regulation with stem cell and tissue homeostasis
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- Stem cells are uniquely able to self-renew, to undergo multilineage differentiation, and to persist throughout life in a number of tissues. Stem cells are regulated by a combination of shared and tissue-specific mechanisms and are distinguished from restricted progenitors by differences in transcriptional and epigenetic regulation. Emerging evidence suggests that other aspects of cellular physiology, including mitosis, signal transduction, and metabolic regulation, also differ between stem cells and their progeny. These differences may allow stem cells to be regulated independently of differentiated cells in response to circadian rhythms, changes in metabolism, diet, exercise, mating, aging, infection, and disease. This allows stem cells to sustain homeostasis or to remodel relevant tissues in response to physiological change. Stem cells are therefore not only regulated by short-range signals that maintain homeostasis within their tissue of origin, but also by long-range signals that integrate stem cell function with systemic physiology.
- Subjects :
- Induced stem cells
Guided Tissue Regeneration
General Neuroscience
Cellular differentiation
Neuroscience(all)
Stem Cells
Stem cell theory of aging
Cell Differentiation
Biology
Neural stem cell
Article
Cell biology
Endothelial stem cell
Animals
Homeostasis
Humans
Stem cell
Nerve Net
Tissue homeostasis
Adult stem cell
Cell Proliferation
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6916fd49e48a6b231f6bde4f732074a9