Biological Reviews, volume 97, issue 1, pages 299-325
A pan‐metazoan concept for adult stem cells: the wobbling Penrose landscape
Baruch Rinkevich
1
,
Loriano Ballarin
2
,
Pedro Martinez
3, 4
,
Ildiko M L Somorjai
5
,
Oshrat Ben Hamo
1
,
Ilya Borisenko
6
,
Eugene Berezikov
7
,
Alexander Ereskovsky
6, 8, 9
,
Eve Gazave
10
,
Denis Khnykin
11
,
LUCIA MANNI
2
,
O E Petukhova
12
,
Amalia Rosner
1
,
Eric Röttinger
13, 14
,
Antonietta Spagnuolo
15
,
MICHELA SUGNI
16
,
Stefano Tiozzo
17
,
Bert Hobmayer
18
10
Université de Paris, CNRS, Institut Jacques Monod Paris F‐75006 France
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Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-10-06
Journal:
Biological Reviews
scimago Q1
SJR: 4.347
CiteScore: 21.3
Impact factor: 11
ISSN: 14647931, 1469185X
PubMed ID:
34617397
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Abstract
Adult stem cells (ASCs) in vertebrates and model invertebrates (e.g. Drosophila melanogaster) are typically long-lived, lineage-restricted, clonogenic and quiescent cells with somatic descendants and tissue/organ-restricted activities. Such ASCs are mostly rare, morphologically undifferentiated, and undergo asymmetric cell division. Characterized by 'stemness' gene expression, they can regulate tissue/organ homeostasis, repair and regeneration. By contrast, analysis of other animal phyla shows that ASCs emerge at different life stages, present both differentiated and undifferentiated phenotypes, and may possess amoeboid movement. Usually pluri/totipotent, they may express germ-cell markers, but often lack germ-line sequestering, and typically do not reside in discrete niches. ASCs may constitute up to 40% of animal cells, and participate in a range of biological phenomena, from whole-body regeneration, dormancy, and agametic asexual reproduction, to indeterminate growth. They are considered legitimate units of selection. Conceptualizing this divergence, we present an alternative stemness metaphor to the Waddington landscape: the 'wobbling Penrose' landscape. Here, totipotent ASCs adopt ascending/descending courses of an 'Escherian stairwell', in a lifelong totipotency pathway. ASCs may also travel along lower stemness echelons to reach fully differentiated states. However, from any starting state, cells can change their stemness status, underscoring their dynamic cellular potencies. Thus, vertebrate ASCs may reflect just one metazoan ASC archetype.
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