Since their
initial discovery several decades ago, stem cells have faced intensive
study due to their potential medical applications and fascinating
biology. A question that has long interested scientists is how do stem
cells continue to remain in an undifferentiated or ‘uncommitted’
state, unlike every other cell type in the body? Now, a new study from
researchers at the National Centre for Cell Science (NCCS) sheds light on this unique problem.
Stem
cells, with their ability to form almost all the cells in the body,
have remained a subject of intense scientific interest. In a recent study, a group of Indian scientists led by Deepa Subramanyam from the National Centre for Cell Science (NCCS)
show that endocytosis, a process by which cells internalizes substances
such as proteins, polysaccharides etc., is essential for stem cells to
retain their “stemness”.Embryonic stem cells are a group of cells which reside deep within the mass of cells that are formed soon after fertilization of the egg during development. These cells have the remarkable ability to give rise to ~200 different cell types, based on the signals they receive from the outside environment.
In the year 1981, Martin J Evans and Mathew Kaufmann from the University of Cambridge, UK, published a method to culture embryonic cell lines in the laboratory, which could then be artificially induced to differentiate into different cell types. This discovery brought the attention of the research community to the potential applications of embryonic stem cell technology, particularly in the fields of regenerative medicine and disease therapeutics. Since then the field has grown in leaps and bounds.
While scientists all over the world are working on methods to transform stem cells into specific cell types, our knowledge on the pathways and molecules that help these stem cells to sustain their state of “stemness” still remains scarce. In the present study, Subramanyam’s team add one piece to this puzzle by showing how endocytosis helps in maintaining the undifferentiated state of embryonic stem cells.
“In order to achieve proper and complete differentiation, it is critical to understand how certain factors can regulate the fate of stem cells,” says Subramanyam. The team knocked down the expression of Cltc, a protein required for endocytosis, in mouse embryonic cells and found that this reduces the ability of embryonic stem cells to stay in undifferentiated form.
“The report by Subramanyam’s group reconfirms and builds on the importance of the cellular transport machinery in actively regulating the stem cell state,” says Maneesha Inamdar, Professor at the Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR) who was not associated with the study. She added that the importance of studying transient interactions and the machinery that moves cargo into and within a cell has been becoming more and more evident over the years.
“Understanding how cellular processes such as endocytosis play a role in regulating the pluripotency of embryonic stem cells is important towards developing safer and more efficient cell-based therapies, ” says Subramanyam.
By Aditi Jain
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