The organization and control of stem cells is a key issue in epithelial cell biology. The small intestinal murine crypt is a useful tissue to study such problems since stem cells are known to be located at specific positions at the bottom of the crypt where they are self maintaining. Recent data sug
Somatic Mutation, Monoclonality and Stochastic Models of Stem Cell Organization in the Intestinal Crypt
β Scribed by Markus Loeffler; Andreas Birke; Douglas Winton; Christopher Potten
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 627 KB
- Volume
- 160
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Among highly proliferating tissues the intestinal tissue is of particular interest. Techniques are available that permit an insight into how intestinal crypts as the basic macroscopic tissue unit are regenerated from a small population of self-maintaining stem cells. However, neither the precise number of these stem cells nor their properties are known. We have recently suggested a model of stem cell organization which explains the life cycle of murine intestinal crypts, their birth (by crypt fission) and extinction rates, as well as their size distribution on a quantitative basis (Loeffler & Grossman, 1991). The model assumptions involve two stochastic branching processes, one for the growth of several independent indistinguishable stem cells and a second for a threshold dependent crypt fission process. New data have now become available challenging the above concept. They relate to the conversion of crypts to monoclonal phenotypic expression after mutagenic events, presumably taking place in single stem cells. A detailed analysis of these data is shown here utilizing a more elaborate version of the above model. The new data are consistent with this model within the range of parameters predicted previously. We conclude that the cellular regeneration of intestinal crypts can be explained on the basis of several indistinguishable stem cells which can replace each other.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
It is shown that a simple Galton-Watson branching process model of the stem-cell pool in intestinal crypts is not simultaneously consistent with observations of the dynamics of replacement of normal by mutant crypt stem cells and other observations which put limits on the probability of crypt loss t
Human diploid "broblast cells can divide for only a limited number of times in vitro, a phenomenon known as replicative senescence or the Hay#ick limit. Variability in doubling potential is observed within a clone of cells, and between two sister cells arising from a single mitotic division. This st
Epidemiological, morphological, and molecular differences exist between carcinomas of the right and left sides of the large bowel. To investigate whether this is reflected in differences in somatic mutation frequency in the background mucosa, mutation of the neutral O-acetyltransferase gene (oat) wa
## Abstract We recently identified a murine hemopoietic stem cell colony which consists of undifferentiated (blast) cells and appears to be more primitive than CFUβGEMM in the stem cell hierarchy. The progenitors for the colony which we termed βstem cell colonyβ possess an extensive selfβrenewal ca