More than a decade ago, plasticity suddenly became a fashionable topic with overemphasized implications for regenerative medicine. The concept of plasticity is supported by old transplantation work, at least for embryonic cells, and metaplasia is a classic example of plasticity observed in patients. Nevertheless, the publication of a series of papers showing rare conversion of a given cell type into another unrelated cell raised the possibility of using any unaffected tissue to create at will new cells to replace a different failing tissue or organ. This resulted in disingenuous interpretations and a reason not to fund anymore research on embryonic stem cells (ESc). Moreover, many papers on plasticity were difficult to reproduce and thus questioned; raising issues about plasticity as a technical artefact or a consequence of rare spontaneous cells fusion. More recently, reprogramming adult differentiated cells to a pluripotent state (iPS) became possible, and later, one type of differentiated cell could be directly reprogrammed into another (e.g. fibroblasts into neurons) without reverting to pluripotency. Although the latter results from different and more robust experimental protocols, these phenomena also exemplify plasticity. In this review, we want to place plasticity in a historical perspective still taking into account ethical and political implications.

'Hearts and bones': the ups and downs of 'plasticity' in stem cell biology / P. Bonfanti, Y.B.. - In: EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE. - ISSN 1757-4676. - 4:5(2012 May 01), pp. 353-361. [10.1002/emmm.201200220]

'Hearts and bones': the ups and downs of 'plasticity' in stem cell biology

G. Cossu
Ultimo
2012

Abstract

More than a decade ago, plasticity suddenly became a fashionable topic with overemphasized implications for regenerative medicine. The concept of plasticity is supported by old transplantation work, at least for embryonic cells, and metaplasia is a classic example of plasticity observed in patients. Nevertheless, the publication of a series of papers showing rare conversion of a given cell type into another unrelated cell raised the possibility of using any unaffected tissue to create at will new cells to replace a different failing tissue or organ. This resulted in disingenuous interpretations and a reason not to fund anymore research on embryonic stem cells (ESc). Moreover, many papers on plasticity were difficult to reproduce and thus questioned; raising issues about plasticity as a technical artefact or a consequence of rare spontaneous cells fusion. More recently, reprogramming adult differentiated cells to a pluripotent state (iPS) became possible, and later, one type of differentiated cell could be directly reprogrammed into another (e.g. fibroblasts into neurons) without reverting to pluripotency. Although the latter results from different and more robust experimental protocols, these phenomena also exemplify plasticity. In this review, we want to place plasticity in a historical perspective still taking into account ethical and political implications.
English
Cell fusion; ES and iPS cells; Multipotency; Nuclear reprogramming; Plasticity and trans-differentiation; Stem/progenitor cells
Settore BIO/17 - Istologia
Settore BIOS-13/A - Istologia ed embriologia umana
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
1-mag-2012
2-mar-2012
Wiley-Blackwell; Springer
4
5
353
361
9
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
'Hearts and bones': the ups and downs of 'plasticity' in stem cell biology / P. Bonfanti, Y.B.. - In: EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE. - ISSN 1757-4676. - 4:5(2012 May 01), pp. 353-361. [10.1002/emmm.201200220]
reserved
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
3
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
P. Bonfanti, Y. Barrandon, G. Cossu
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/233799
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