What is a stem cell?
A stem cell is a cell with the unique
ability to develop into specialised cell types in the body. In the future they
may be used to replace cells and tissues that have been damaged or lost due to
disease.
What is a stem cell?
• Our
body is made up of many different types of cells.
• Most
cells are specialised to perform particular functions, such as red blood cells,
that carry oxygen around our bodies in
the blood, but they are unable to divide.
• Stem
cells provide new cells for the body as it grows, and replace specialised cells
that are damaged or lost. They have two unique properties that enable them to
do this:
o They
can divide over and over again to produce new cells.
o As they divide, they can change into the other types of cell that make up the body.
An illustration showing a stem cell giving
rise to more stem cells or specialised cells.
Image credit: Genome Research Limited
Different types of stem cell
• There
are three main types of stem cell:
o embryonic
stem cells
o adult
stem cells
o induced
pluripotent stem cells
Embryonic stem cells
• Embryonic
stem cells supply new cells for an embryo? as it grows and develops into a
baby.
• These
stem cells are said to be pluripotent, which means they can change into any
cell in the body.
Adult stem cells
• Adult
stem cells supply new cells as an organism grows and to replace cells that get
damaged.
• Adult
stem cells are said to be multipotent, which means they can only change into
some cells in the body, not any cell, for example:
o Blood
(or 'haematopoietic') stem cells can only replace the various types of cells in
the blood.
o Skin (or 'epithelial') stem cells provide the different types of cells that make up our skin and hair.
An illustration showing different types of
stem cell in the body.
Induced pluripotent stem cells
• Induced
pluripotent stem cells, or ‘iPS cells’, are stem cells that scientists make in
the laboratory.
• ‘Induced’
means that they are made in the lab by taking normal adult cells, like skin or
blood cells, and reprogramming them to become stem cells.
• Just like embryonic stem cells, they are pluripotent so they can develop into any cell type.
A scientist here at the Wellcome Genome
Campus working on induced pluripotant stem cells.
Image credit: Genome Research Limited
Why are stem cells useful?
• Stem
cells have several uses including:
o research
– to help us understand the basic biology of how living things work and what
happens in different types of cell during disease.
o therapy
– to replace lost or damaged cells that our bodies can’t replace naturally.
• Research
is looking to better understand the properties of stem cells so that we can:
o understand
how our bodies grow and develop
o find
ways of using stem cells to replace cells or tissues? that have been damaged or
lost.
• We
can use stem cells to study how cells become specialised for specific functions
in the body, and what happens when this process goes wrong in disease.
• If
we understand stem cell development, we may be able to replicate this process
to create new cells, tissues and organs?.
• We can grow tissue and organ structures from stem cells, which can then be studied to find out how they function and how they are affected by different drugs?.
These heart cells were grown from stem
cells in a petri dish and can be used to study the beating rhythm of the heart.
Image credit: The McEwen Centre for
Regenerative Medicine, University Health Network
Stem cell therapy
• Cells,
tissues and organs can sometimes be permanently damaged or lost by disease,
injury and genetic conditions?.
• Stem
cells may be one way of generating new cells that can then be transplanted into
the body to replace those that are damaged or lost.
• Adult
stem cells are currently used to treat some conditions, for example:
o Blood
stem cells are used to provide a source of healthy blood cells for people with
some blood conditions, such as thalassaemia, and cancer patients who have lost
their own blood stem cells during treatment.
o Skin
stem cells can be used to generate new skin for people with severe burns.
• Age-related
macular degeneration (AMD) is an example of a disease where stem cells could be
used as a new form of treatment in the future:
o Some
people with age-related macular degeneration lose their sight because cells in
the retina? of the eye called retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells stop
working.
o Scientists are using induced pluripotent stem cells to produce new RPE cells in the lab that can then be put into a patient’s eye to replace the damaged cells.
• Stem
cells could be used to generate new organs for use in transplants:
o Currently,
damaged organs can be replaced by obtaining healthy organs from a donor, however
donated organs may be 'rejected' by the body as the immune system sees it as
something that is foreign.
o Induced pluripotent stem cells generated from the patient themselves could be used to grow new organs that would have a lower risk of being rejected.
• To
generate induced pluripotent stem cells, scientists re-introduce the signals
that normally tell stem cells to stay as stem cells in the early embryo. These
switch off any genes that tell the cell to be specialised, and switch on genes
that tell the cell to be a stem cell.
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