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StellaTUM: current consensus and discussion on pancreatic stellate cell research

Authors :
Günter Klöppel
Junseo Oh
Jeremy S. Wilson
Massimo Pinzani
Rosa F. Hwang
Thomas M. Gress
Atsushi Masamune
Guido Adler
Minoti V. Apte
Helmut Friess
Phoebe A. Phillips
Carolin Reiser-Erkan
Robert Jaster
Hans Joerg Habisch
Hidekazu Tsukamoto
Malte Buchholz
Mert Erkan
Irene Esposito
Craig D. Logsdon
Claus Kordes
Sönke Detlefsen
Christoph W. Michalski
Max G. Bachem
Jörg Kleeff
Source :
Gut, Erkan, M, Adler, G, Apte, M V, Bachem, M G, Buchholz, M, Detlefsen, S, Esposito, I, Friess, H, Gress, T M, Habisch, H-J, Hwang, R F, Jaster, R, Kleeff, J, Klöppel, G, Kordes, C, Logsdon, C D, Masamune, A, Michalski, C W, Oh, J, Phillips, P A, Pinzani, M, Reiser-Erkan, C, Tsukamoto, H & Wilson, J 2012, ' StellaTUM: current consensus and discussion on pancreatic stellate cell research ', Gut (English Edition), vol. 61, no. 2, pp. 172-8 . https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2011-301220
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
BMJ, 2011.

Abstract

The field of pancreatic stellate cell (PSC) biology is very young, as the essential in-vitro tools to study these cells (ie, methods to isolate and culture PSC) were only developed as recently as in 1998. Nonetheless, there has been an exponential increase in research output in this field over the past decade, with numerous research groups around the world focusing their energies into elucidating the biology and function of these cells. It is now well established that PSC are responsible for producing the stromal reaction (fibrosis) of two major diseases of the pancreas—chronic pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer. Despite exponentially increasing data, the methods for studying PSC remain variable. Although within individual laboratories methods are consistent, different methodologies used by various research groups make it difficult to compare results and conclusions. This article is not a review article on the functions of PSC. Instead, members of the Pancreatic Star Alliance (http://www.pancreaticstaralliance.com) discuss here and consolidate current knowledge, to outline and delineate areas of consensus or otherwise (eg, with regard to methodological approaches) and, more importantly, to identify essential directions for future research. Hepatic stellate cells (HSC) were first described by Karl von Kupffer in 1876; however, similar cells in the pancreas were first observed in the 1980s.1–3 In 1998, Apte et al 4 and Bachem et al 5 isolated and cultured PSC.4 5 In the normal pancreas, PSC are located in close proximity to the basal aspect of pancreatic acinar cells. In sections immunostained for the marker desmin (a cytoskeletal protein), quiescent PSC can be seen as cells with a central cell body and long cytoplasmic projections extending along the base of adjacent acinar cells similar to that of pericytes in the mammary gland. …

Details

ISSN :
14683288 and 00175749
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gut
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b3f7d4a4d61dfb112bb3464259578b57
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2011-301220