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492356
Advanced Concepts in Stem Cell Biology
Description
Undergraduate Biotechnology in Animal Physiology Mind Map on Advanced Concepts in Stem Cell Biology, created by Lydia Buckmaster on 18/01/2014.
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biotechnology in animal physiology
biotechnology in animal physiology
undergraduate
Mind Map by
Lydia Buckmaster
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Lydia Buckmaster
almost 11 years ago
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Resource summary
Advanced Concepts in Stem Cell Biology
Reprogramming Cell Fate
Nuclear Transfer
Somatic cell nucleus is injected into an enucleated oocyte, which are then fused together
Reprograms the nucleus
Resulting embryo generates an identical clone of the donor organism
e.g. tadpoles, Dolly the sheep
Cell Fusion
Two cell types are combined together
Just the cytoplasm fused
If DNA replication and cell division does not occur, a binucleated heterokaryon is produced
If it does, a synkaryon is produced instead
Can be euploid (equal number of chromosomes - fuse cells from the same species)
Or aneuploid (abnormal number of chromosomes - fuse cells from different species)
Transcription-Factor Transduction
TFs such as c-Myc, Oct4, Sox2 and Klf4 activate pluripotency in a somatic cell
Causes it to divide into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells)
Uses
Patient-specific cell therapy
Drug screening
Human disease modelling
Lineage Specifiers
Suggested that pluripotency factors such as Oct4 and Sox2 also function to specify a lineage during ESC differentiation
Overexpression of certain factors leads to differentiation of a specific lineage
Oct4 specifies the mesoderm
Sox2 specifies the neuroectoderm
Extrinsic cytokine signalling
Mechanism which allows control of the expression of the various pluripotency factors which determine cell fate
ESCs remain undifferentiated due to all of the key pluripotency factors being expressed at similar levels
No factor becomes dominant, and so differentiation does not occur
Key to stem cells self-renewing and maintaining of their undifferentiated state
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