Iniciar sesión

The stem cell niche is the dynamic microenvironment where stem cells reside. Inside these niches, the cells may remain undifferentiated, undergo high self-renewal, or become lineage-specific progenitors. Stem cells coexist with other niche cells, such as stromal cells. They also interact closely with the ECM. Cell-cell and cell-matrix communication occur via adhesion molecules or soluble factors that signal the stem cells and determine their fate. Stromal cells also provide survival signals to the stem cells preventing their apoptotic death. This way, the niche allows stem cells to produce progenitors or transit-amplifying cells (TA cells) periodically and replace the body’s damaged or dead cells. Thus, the niche maintains a balance between stem cell quiescence and differentiation.

Adult tissues, including the bone marrow, skin, intestine, or brain, harbor stem cells inside specific niches. For example, hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) reside amongst osteoblastic cells, stromal cells, and reticulocytes that form the bone marrow niche. The epithelial stem cells of the skin live in the bulge area of the hair follicles. These stem cells interact closely with keratinocytes and help regenerate the hair follicles. The neural stem cells of the adult nervous system are found within the hippocampus region that produces neuroblasts and mature neurons. The neighboring endothelial cells in the hippocampus form the stem cell niche of the nervous system. In the intestine, the intestinal stem cells or ISCs are found in the crypt region interspersed with the Paneth cells. Paneth cells constitute the intestinal stem cell niche and induce the ISCs to produce TA cells and replace the villus every 3 to 5 days.

Tags
Stem Cell NicheMicroenvironmentUndifferentiated CellsSelf renewalLineage specific ProgenitorsStromal CellsECMCell cell CommunicationCell matrix CommunicationAdhesion MoleculesSurvival SignalsApoptotic DeathTransit amplifying CellsAdult TissuesHematopoietic Stem CellsBone Marrow NicheEpithelial Stem CellsNeural Stem CellsIntestinal Stem CellsPaneth Cells

Del capítulo 39:

article

Now Playing

39.3 : Stem Cell Niche

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

4.9K Vistas

article

39.1 : Desarrollo cigótico y formación de células madre

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

4.7K Vistas

article

39.2 : Fuente y potencia de las células madre

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

4.5K Vistas

article

39.4 : Renovación de las células madre intestinales

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

2.5K Vistas

article

39.5 : Papel de la señalización de efrina-eph en la renovación de las células madre intestinales

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

2.2K Vistas

article

39.6 : Papel de la señalización de Notch en la renovación de las células madre intestinales

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

2.0K Vistas

article

39.7 : Renovación de las células madre epidérmicas de la piel

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

2.4K Vistas

article

39.8 : Multipotencia y nicho de la célula madre protuberante

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

3.1K Vistas

article

39.9 : Aplicaciones clínicas de las células madre epidérmicas

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

2.6K Vistas

article

39.10 : Características distintivas de las células madre adultas frente a las células madre cancerosas

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

3.3K Vistas

article

39.11 : Cultivo de células madre

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

4.9K Vistas

article

39.12 : Renovación de tejidos sin células madre

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

1.6K Vistas

article

39.13 : Células no renovables

Stem Cell Biology And Renewal in Epithelial Tissue

2.3K Vistas

JoVE Logo

Privacidad

Condiciones de uso

Políticas

Investigación

Educación

ACERCA DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos los derechos reservados