| Glossary of Stem Cell-Related Terms
The following is a partial glossary of some stem cell-related
terms provided for your convenience:
Adult stem cells: Stem cells in the
developed organism; these include the various types of multipotent
and unipotent stem cells, but to date do not include known pluripotent
stem cells.
Allogeneic transplantation: Cell, tissue,
or organ transplants from one member of a species to a genetically
other member of the same species.
Autologous transplantation: Cell, tissue,
or organ transplants from one person back to the same person. Such
transplants from self do not induce an immune response and are not
rejected. In one example, a cancer patient may have her HSC or bone
marrow removed and stored during treatment with sufficient radiation
or chemical therapy to kill all blood-forming cells (and, perhaps,
all cancer cells), and then her blood-forming capacity is rescued
with autologous HSC or bone marrow.
Embryonic germline (EG) cells: EG cells
are pluripotent stem cell lines derived from the primitive germline
cells that exist between the blastocyst stage of development until
their conversion within gonads to egg or sperm stem cells. Their
properties are similar to those of ES cells.
Embryonic stem (ES) cells: ES cells
are pluripotent cell lines established, usually, from the inner
cell mass of the blastocyst stage of development. Within the population
of cultured ES cells are cells that can produce more ES cells, or
under conditions of differentiation, give rise to collections of
cells that include most, if not all cell types that can be found
in a postimplantation embryo, fetus, or developed organism, but
not trophoblast or placenta. To date no ES cells cultured in vitro
can give rise to developed organisms or even developed organs. A
test of pluripotency of mouse ES cells is to inject them into blastocysts
prior to implantation; the progeny of these cells can participate
in all germline and somatic tissues along with host blastocyst-derived
cells.
Fetus: The postembryonic stages of
development from embryo to developed organism, usually ending at
parturition.
Germline cells: Cells that arise from
the inner cell mass and are irreversibly committed to give rise
to eggs or sperm. Primitive germline cells (which are germline stem
cells) migrate from the posterior of the early postimplantation
embryo to the developing gonads, known as genital ridges, where
they commit to spermatogenesis (in testes) and oogenesis (in ovaries).
Graft versus host disease: A transplantation
syndrome wherein mature T lymphocytes from an allogeneic donor undergo
an immune response against tissues and organs of the host. These
immune responses can vary in degree, from mild skin, gut, and liver
damage to lethal disease. The usual circumstance is an allogeneic
bone marrow (BM) or mobilized peripheral blood (MPB) transplant
from healthy donors to hosts who have received substantial pre-transplant
conditioning, which prevents host immune rejection of donor cells.
In that circumstance, donor mature T lymphocytes are present as
contaminants of HSC and blood progenitors. Pure allogeneic HSC transplants
do not cause graft versus host disease.
Hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT):
Transplantation of cells with blood-forming potential, usually
bone marrow (BM). HSC are the only cells in HCT that provide rapid
and sustained reconstitution of blood formation. HSC are found in
adult BM, umbilical cord blood, mobilized peripheral blood (MPB,
the nucleated cell fraction of blood after treatment of the donor
with agents that increase the passage of HSC from BM to blood),
and in fetal liver.
Multipotent stem cells: Stem cells
whose progeny are of multiple differentiated cell types, but all
within a particular tissue, organ, or physiological system. For
example, blood-forming (hematopoietic) stem cells (HSC) are single
multipotent cells that can produce progeny that include HSC, blood
cell-restricted oligopotent progenitors, and all cell types and
elements (e.g., platelets) that are normal components of the blood.
Oligopotent progenitor cells: Progenitor
cells that can produce more than one type of mature cells. For example,
the clonal common myeloid progenitor is a progenitor cell which
can give rise to blood granulocytes, monocytes, red blood cells,
platelets, basophiles, eosinophiles and dendritic cells, but not
T lymphocytes, B lymphocytes, or natural killer (NK) cells.
Pluripotent stem cells: Stem cells
that include in their progeny all cell types that can be found in
a postimplantation embryo, fetus, or developed organism, but not
embryonic components of the trophoblast and placenta (these are
usually called extra-embryonic).
Post-implantation embryo: Implanted
embryos in all early stages of development until the establishment
of the body plan of a developed organism with identifiable tissues
and organs.
Pre-implantation embryos: Fertilized
eggs (zygotes) and all of the developmental stages up to, but not
beyond, the blastocyst stage.
Progenitor cells: Cells that can differentiate
into mature cells, but which lack the capacity to self-renew. Progenitor
cells are derived from stem cells and are intermediate to the production
of mature cells.
Somatic cells: All cells within the
developing or developed organism with the exception of germline
cells.
Stem cells: Single cells that have
the capacity 1) to self-renew as well as 2) to differentiate to
more mature cells.
Totipotent stem cells: Stem cells that
include in their progeny all cell types that can be found in an
embryo, fetus, or developed organism, as well as the cells that
form the embryonic components of the trophoblast and placenta.
Transdifferentiation: The ability of
a particular cell of one tissue, organ or system, including stem
or progenitor cells, to be caused to differentiate into a cell type
characteristic of another tissue, organ, or system; e.g., HSC to
liver hepatocytes.
Unipotent stem cells: Stem cells that
self-renew as well as give rise to a single mature cell type; e.g.,
spermatogenic stem cells.
Zygote: The fertilized egg, the result
of sperm/egg interactions leading to the fusion of sperm and egg
nuclei. The zygote usually begins cell division to give rise to
the stages of the pre-implantation embryo, from the 2 cell stage
to the blastocyst; but only the fertilized egg is the zygote.
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