What is a stem cell?
Two unique defining attributes:
Where has a lot of the knowledge of stem cells come from?
At which stage in development do you begin to see ‘structure’?
What is the structure of the blastocyst?
What generally forms the placenta?
What cells give rise to the embryo?
What happens at gastrulation?
What is the movement of the blastocyst?
What is a key event in early development?
“It is not birth, marriage, or death, but gastrulation which is truly the most important time in your life” - lewis wolpert (1986)
What happens to stem cells in the inner cell mass?
What is important in getting stem cells to differentiate?
What are the major fates of the three germ layers?
Ectoderm:
Mesoderm:
Endoderm:
(also germ cells produce sperm and egg)
What is homeostasis? How do stem cells contribute to homeostasis?
How are stem cells activated in AMI?
How are stem cells activated in brain injury?
Hypoxia or some other trauma:
What are the major stem cell types?
What are embryonic stem cell lines?
What are the commitment options available to a cell?
Compare adult and embryonic stem cells
Adult stem cells
embryonic stem cells
What are umbilical cord and placenta stem cells?
What lessons about stem cells can we learn from the haemopoietic system?
What are stem cell niches?
What is plasticity?
What does plasticity relfect?
Developmental origins
- adult stem cells derived from different organisms could potentially, under the right conditions, differentiate into different cell types of organs
BUT only in organs related to them developmentally
i.e. ectodermal origin stem cells to ectodermal organs e.g. CNS, epidermis etc