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Differentiation Chapter 17. Differentiation Differentiation is the process leading to the expression of phenotypic properties characteristic of functionally.

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Presentation on theme: "Differentiation Chapter 17. Differentiation Differentiation is the process leading to the expression of phenotypic properties characteristic of functionally."— Presentation transcript:

1 Differentiation Chapter 17

2 Differentiation Differentiation is the process leading to the expression of phenotypic properties characteristic of functionally mature cell in vivo Can be irreversible and reversible

3 Differentiation Combination of constitutive (stably expressed without induction) and adaptive (subject to positive and negative regulation of expression) properties Commitment is an irreversible transition from stem cell to a particular defined lineage endowing the cell potential to express a limited repertoire of properties, either constitutively or when induced to do so

4 Terminal differentiation Cell has progressed down a particular lineage -Phenotype is fully expressed and beyond which cell cannot progress -Neurons, skeletal muscle, or keratinized squames - irreversible

5 Dedifferentiation Describes loss of differentiated properties of a tissue when it becomes malignant or when it is grown in culture Contributing factors – cell death, selective outgrowth and adaptive responses Differentiated phenotype may be regained – right inducers (adaptive process)

6 Lineage selection Wrong lineage selection – no amount of induction can bring back required phenotype

7 Two pathways of differentiation Undifferentiated stem cells – progenitor cells that will proliferate and progress towards terminal differentiation -Reach terminal stages - gives rise to mature differentiated cells that will not further divide

8 Two pathways of differentiation In trauma – cells show less proliferation – lose differentiation property - undergo cell division - Tissue is regained -Differentiation is reinduced -Renewal is rapid Problem – cells reentering cell cycle may/not give phenotypically identical cells as differentiated cells - can give rise to subset of reversibly differentiated cells

9 Proliferation and Differentiation Differentiation progresses – cell division reduces and ceases Cell proliferation – incompatible – with expression of differentiated properties Tumor cells break this restriction – continuously synthesizes – while cells are proliferating

10 Commitment and Lineage Progression from stem cell to particular differentiation – commitment A hematopoietic stem cell – commits to form lymphocytes -Will not change later stage and adopt myeloid or erythrocytic form -Point between stem cell and particular progenitor stage where a cell or its progeny can no longer transfer to a separate lineage

11 Home work Explain the proliferation and differentiation conditions of an organ culture. Explain how tumor cells will behave in their commitment and lineage activities

12 Status of a cell in making a commitment to a lineage Stem cells or early progenitor cells may differentiate in one or more directions Late progenitor cells may stay true to lineage Differentiated cells – fibrocytes may dedifferentiate and proliferate but retain lineage fidelity

13 Stem cell plasticity Stem cell theory: More primitive a stem cell – the greater its potency Unipotent stem cell gives rise to only one lineage Bipotent – gives rise to only two lineages – a lymphoid stem cell gives rise to T- or B- lymphocytes Multipotent- gives rise to more than two lineages

14 Stem cell plasticity Totipotency: stem cell gives rise to all known cell types – embryonal stem cell

15 Stem cell plasticity Greater the degree of commitment, the greater the likelihood of stem cell being located in a specific tissue -Ex: Hematopoietic stem cells are located in bone marrow -With commitment and histological localization comes a reduction in potency – questioned?

16 Stem cell plasticity Tissues that are non-regenerative such as neurons in brain have stem cells Tissue localization – does not mean lineage commitment and reduced potency -Liver cells can generate neurons -Bone marrow stem cells can generate cardiac cells

17 Markers of Differentiation Lineage markers – expressed early and retained throughout subsequent maturation stages Are specific cell products or enzymes involved in synthesis of those products -Hemoglobin in an erythrocyte -Serum albumin in a hepatocyte Measured by RT-PCR and Microarray analysis

18 Induction of differentiation Five parameters that control differentiation Cell-cell interaction Cell-matrix interaction Cell shape and polarity Oxygen tension Soluble systemic factors

19 Cell-cell interaction Homotypic: Homologous cell interaction Involves metabolites, second messengers such as AMP, diacylglcerol (DAG), Ca or electrical charge communicated between cells Harmonizes expression of differentiation within a population of similar cells

20 Cell-cell interaction Heterotypic: Heterologous cell interaction Between mesodermally and endodermally or ectodermally derived cells Initiating and promoting differentiation Positively and negatively acting growth factors

21 Cell-Matrix Interactions Mixture of glycoproteins and proteoglycans is highly specific for each tissue Construction of artificial matrices from different constituents can regulate gene expression Collagen – expression of epithelial cells

22 Systemic or Exogenous factors Systemic physiological regulators – Hormones, Vitamins, Inorganic ions (role of calcium) Nonphysiological regulators – DMSO, N- methyl acetamide etc

23 This project is funded by a grant awarded under the President’s Community Based Job Training Grant as implemented by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration (CB-15-162-06-60). NCC is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the following basis: against any individual in the United States, on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age disability, political affiliation or belief; and against any beneficiary of programs financially assisted under Title I of the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (WIA), on the basis of the beneficiary’s citizenship/status as a lawfully admitted immigrant authorized to work in the United States, or his or her participation in any WIA Title I-financially assisted program or activity.

24 Disclaimer This workforce solution was funded by a grant awarded under the President’s Community-Based Job Training Grants as implemented by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration. The solution was created by the grantee and does not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Labor. The Department of Labor makes no guarantees, warranties, or assurances of any kind, express or implied, with respect to such information, including any information on linked sites and including, but not limited to, accuracy of the information or its completeness, timeliness, usefulness, adequacy, continued availability, or ownership. This solution is copyrighted by the institution that created it. Internal use by an organization and/or personal use by an individual for non-commercial purposes is permissible. All other uses require the prior authorization of the copyright owner.


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