13.09.2022 Views

Molecular Biology of the Cell by Bruce Alberts, Alexander Johnson, Julian Lewis, David Morgan, Martin Raff, Keith Roberts, Peter Walter by by Bruce Alberts, Alexander Johnson, Julian Lewis, David Morg

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

1262 Chapter 22: Stem Cells and Tissue Renewal

References

General

Fawcett DW & Jensh R (2002) Bloom and Fawcett’s Concise Histology,

2nd ed. New York/London: Arnold.

Gurdon JB & Melton DA (2008) Nuclear reprogramming in cells.

Science 322, 1811–1815.

Li L & Xie T (2005) Stem cell niche: structure and function. Annu. Rev.

Cell Dev. Biol. 21, 605–631.

Losick VP, Morris LX, Fox DT & Spradling A (2011) Drosophila stem cell

niches: a decade of discovery suggests a unified view of stem cell

regulation. Dev. Cell 21, 159–171.

Young B, Woodford P & O’Dowd G (2014) Wheater’s Functional

Histology: A Text and Colour Atlas, 6th ed. Edinburgh: Churchill

Livingstone/Elsevier.

Stem Cells and Renewal in Epithelial Tissues

Barker N, van Es JH, Kuipers J et al. (2007) Identification of stem cells

in small intestine and colon by marker gene Lgr5. Nature

449, 1003–1007.

Blanpain C & Fuchs E (2014) Plasticity of epithelial stem cells in tissue

regeneration. Science 344, 1242281.

Crosnier C, Stamataki D & Lewis J (2006) Organizing cell renewal in the

intestine: stem cells, signals and combinatorial control. Nat. Rev.

Genet. 7, 349–359.

Sato T, van Es JH, Snippert HJ et al. (2011) Paneth cells constitute the

niche for Lgr5 stem cells in intestinal crypts. Nature 469, 415–418.

Sato T & Clevers H (2013) Growing self-organizing mini-guts from a

single intestinal stem cell: mechanism and applications. Science

340, 1190–1194.

Stanger BZ, Tanaka AJ & Melton DA (2007) Organ size is limited by the

number of embryonic progenitor cells in the pancreas but not the

liver. Nature 445, 886–891.

Taub R (2004) Liver regeneration: from myth to mechanism. Nat. Rev.

Mol. Cell Biol. 5, 836–847.

Watt FM & Huck WTS (2013) Role of the extracellular matrix in

regulating stem cell fate. Nat. Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 14, 467–473.

Fibroblasts and Their Transformations: The Connective-

Tissue Cell Family

Cooper KL, Oh S, Sung Y et al. (2013) Multiple phases of chondrocyte

enlargement underlie differences in skeletal proportions. Nature

495, 375–378.

Karsenty G & Wagner EF (2002) Reaching a genetic and molecular

understanding of skeletal development. Dev. Cell 2, 389–406.

Rinn JL, Bondre C, Gladstone HB et al. (2006) Anatomic demarcation

by positional variation in fibroblast gene expression programs.

PLoS Genet. 2, e119.

Seeman E & Delmas PD (2006) Bone quality—the material and

structural basis of bone strength and fragility. N. Engl. J. Med.

354, 2250–2261.

Zelzer E & Olsen BR (2003) The genetic basis for skeletal diseases.

Nature 423, 343–348.

Genesis and Regeneration of Skeletal Muscle

Bassel-Duby R & Olson EN (2006) Signaling pathways in skeletal

muscle remodeling. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 75, 19–37.

Buckingham M (2006) Myogenic progenitor cells and skeletal

myogenesis in vertebrates. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev. 16, 525–532.

Collins CA, Olsen I, Zammit PS et al. (2005) Stem cell function, selfrenewal,

and behavioral heterogeneity of cells from the adult muscle

satellite cell niche. Cell 122, 289–301.

Lee SJ (2004) Regulation of muscle mass by myostatin. Annu. Rev. Cell

Dev. Biol. 20, 61–86.

Weintraub H, Davis R, Tapscott S et al. (1991) The myoD gene family:

nodal point during specification of the muscle cell lineage. Science

251, 761–766.

Blood Vessels, Lymphatics, and Endothelial Cells

Carmeliet P & Tessier-Lavigne M (2005) Common mechanisms of nerve

and blood vessel wiring. Nature 436, 193–200.

Folkman J & Haudenschild C (1980) Angiogenesis in vitro. Nature

288, 551–556.

Gerhardt H, Golding M, Fruttiger M et al. (2003) VEGF guides

angiogenic sprouting utilizing endothelial tip cell filopodia. J. Cell

Biol. 161, 1163–1177.

Lawson ND & Weinstein BM (2002) In vivo imaging of embryonic

vascular development using transgenic zebrafish. Dev. Biol.

248, 307–318.

Pugh CW & Ratcliffe PJ (2003) Regulation of angiogenesis by hypoxia:

role of the HIF system. Nat. Med. 9, 677–684.

Tammela T & Alitalo K (2010) Lymphangiogenesis: molecular

mechanisms and future promise. Cell 140, 460–476.

A Hierarchical Stem-Cell System: Blood Cell Formation

Orkin SH & Zon LI (2008) Hematopoiesis: an evolving paradigm for

stem cell biology. Cell 132, 631–644.

Shizuru JA, Negrin RS & Weissman IL (2005) Hematopoietic stem

and progenitor cells: clinical and preclinical regeneration of the

hematolymphoid system. Annu. Rev. Med. 56, 509–538.

Regeneration and Repair

Brockes JP & Kumar A (2008) Comparative aspects of animal

regeneration. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 24, 525–549.

Tanaka EM & Reddien PW (2011) The cellular basis for animal

regeneration. Dev. Cell 21, 172–185.

Wagner DE, Wang IE & Reddien PW (2011) Clonogenic neoblasts are

pluripotent adult stem cells that underlie planarian regeneration.

Science 332, 811–816.

Cell Reprogramming and Pluripotent Stem Cells

Apostolou E & Hochedlinger K (2013) Chromatin dynamics during

cellular reprogramming. Nature 502, 462–471.

Egawa N, Kitaoka S, Tsukita K et al. (2012) Drug screening for ALS

using patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells. Sci. Transl.

Med. 4, 145ra104.

Eggan K, Baldwin K, Tackett M et al. (2004) Mice cloned from olfactory

sensory neurons. Nature 428, 44–49.

Fox IJ, Daley GQ, Goldman SA et al. (2014) Use of differentiated

pluripotent stem cells as replacement therapy for treating disease.

Science 345, 1247391.

Inoue H, Nagata N, Kurokawa H & Yamanaka S (2014) iPS cells: a

game changer for future medicine. EMBO J. 33, 409–417.

Kim J, Chu J, Shen X et al. (2008) An extended transcriptional network

for pluripotency of embryonic stem cells. Cell 132, 1049–1061.

Orkin SH & Hochedlinger K (2011) Chromatin connections to

pluripotency and cellular reprogramming. Cell 145, 835–850.

Polo JM, Anderssen E, Walsh RM et al. (2012) A molecular roadmap of

reprogramming somatic cells into iPS cells. Cell 151, 1617–1632.

Radzisheuskaya A & Silver JCR (2014) Do all roads lead to Oct4?

The emerging concepts of induced pluripotency. Trends Cell Biol.

24, 275–284.

Sasai Y, Eiraku M & Suga H (2012) In vitro organogenesis in three

dimensions: self-organising stem cells. Development 139,

4111–4121.

Soza-Ried J & Fisher AG (2012) Reprogramming somatic cells towards

pluripotency by cellular fusion. Curr. Opin. Genet. Dev.

22, 459–465.

Takahashi K & Yamanaka S (2006) Induction of pluripotent stem cells

from mouse embryonic and adult fibroblast cultures by defined

factors. Cell 126, 663–676.

Theunissen TW & Jaenisch R (2014) Molecular control of induced

pluripotency. Cell Stem Cell 14, 720–734.

Watanabe A, Yamada Y & Yamanaka S (2013) Epigenetic regulation

in pluripotent stem cells: a key to breaking the epigenetic barrier.

Philos. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B Biol. Sci. 368, 20120292.

Yamanaka S (2013) The winding road to pluripotency (Nobel Lecture).

Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl. 52, 13900–13909.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!