The
potency of a cell specifies its differentiation potential, or potential to differentiate into different cell types.
Totipotency
Totipotency is the ability of a single
cell to divide and produce all the differentiated cells in an
organism, including extraembryonic tissues.
Totipotent cells include
spores and
zygotes.
In some organisms, cells can dedifferentiate and regain totipotency. For example, a
plant cutting or
callus can be used to grow an entire plant.
Human development begins when a sperm fertilizes an egg and creates a single totipotent cell (zygote). In the first hours after fertilization, this cell divides into identical totipotent cells, which can later develop into any of the three germ layers of a human (endoderm, mesoderm, or ectoderm) and into cells of the cytotrophoblast layer or syncytiotrophoblast layer of the placenta. After reaching the 16-cell stage, the totipotent cells of the morula differentiate into cells that will eventually become either the Blastocyst's Inner cell mass or outer trophoblasts. Approximately four days after fertilization and after several cycles of cell division, these totipotent cells begin to specialize. The inner cell mass, the source of embryonic stem cells, is pluripotent, not totipotent.
Research on Caenorhabditis elegans suggests that multiple mechanisms including RNA regulation may play a role in maintaining totipotency at different stages of development in some species.
Pluripotency
nic stem cells A: Cell colonies that are not yet differentiated. B:
Nerve cell]]
In cell biology, pluripotency refers to a stem cell that has the potential to differentiate into any of the three germ layers: endoderm (interior stomach lining, gastrointestinal tract, the lungs), mesoderm (muscle, bone, blood, urogenital), or ectoderm (epidermal tissues and nervous system). Pluripotent stem cells can give rise to any fetal or adult cell type. However, alone they cannot develop into a fetal or adult animal because they lack the potential to contribute to extraembryonic tissue, such as the placenta.
Induced pluripotency
Induced pluripotent stem cells, commonly abbreviated as
iPS cells are a type of
pluripotent stem cell artificially derived from a non-
pluripotent cell, typically an adult
somatic cell, by inducing a "forced" expression of certain
genes.
Multipotency
Multipotent progenitor cells have the potential to give rise to cells from multiple, but a limited number of lineages. An example of a multipotent stem cell is a hematopoietic cell — a blood stem cell that can develop into several types of blood cells, but cannot develop into brain cells or other types of cells. At the end of the long series of cell divisions that form the embryo are cells that are terminally differentiated, or that are considered to be permanently committed to a specific function.
Scientists have long held the opinion that differentiated cells cannot be altered or caused to behave in any way other than the way in which they have been naturally committed. New research, however, has called that assumption into question. In recent stem cell experiments, scientists have been able to persuade blood stem cells to behave like neurons, or brain cells- a process known as transdifferentiation. Scientists now believe that stem cell research could reveal far more vital information about our bodies than was previously known. There is also continuing research to see if it is possible to make multipotent cells into pluripotent cells.
The induced pluripotency of somatic cells into undifferentiated iPS cells was originally hailed as the end of the controversial use of embryonic stem cells. However, iPS cells are highly tumorigenic, and, despite advances,
Examples of progenitor cells are Vascular Stem Cells which have the capacity to become both Endothelial or smooth muscle cells.
Unipotency
In cell biology, a unipotent cell is one that has the capacity to develop/differentiate into only one type of tissue/cell type. The most common of these in humans are skin cells. This cell has a unique property: self-renewal. This property distinguishes it from most other terminally differentiated non-stem cells. Hepatocytes, which constitute most of the Cytoplasmic mass of the human liver, are unipotent. The liver's ability to regenerate from as little as 25% of its original mass is attributed to this property. A close synonym for unipotent cell is precursor cell.
Notes
Category:Developmental biology
Category:Cell biology
Category:Stem cells