Adult stem cells are most abundantly found in bone
marrow. Stem cells circulate and function to replace dysfunctional
cells, thus fulfilling the natural process of maintaining optimal
health. StemEnhance supports the release of adult stem cells from bone
marrow into circulation.
The recent advances in stem cell research were listed
as one of the most significant health-related stories in the past 25
years by CNN, second only to the complete mapping of the human genome.
“Research on stem cells is advancing knowledge about
how an organism develops from a single cell and how healthy cells
replace damaged cells in adult organisms. This promising area of science
is also leading scientists to investigate cell-based therapies to treat
disease, which is often referred to as regenerative or reparative
medicine.
Stem cells are one of the most fascinating areas of
biology today.
Stem cells have two important characteristics that
distinguish them from other types of cells. First, they are
unspecialized cells that renew themselves for long periods through cell
division. The second is that under certain physiologic or experimental
conditions, they can be induced to become cells with special functions
such as the beating cells of the heart muscle or the insulin-producing
cells of the pancreas.
Stem cells are important for living organisms for
many reasons. In the 3- to 5-day-old embryo, called a blastocyst, stem
cells in developing tissues give rise to the multiple specialized cell
types that make up the heart, lung, skin, and other tissues. In some
adult tissues, such as bone marrow, muscle, and brain, discrete
populations of adult stem cells generate replacements for cells that are
lost through normal wear and tear, injury, or disease.”
Properties of Stem Cells
“Stem cells differ from other kinds of cells in the
body. All stem cells—regardless of their source—have three general
properties: they are capable of dividing and renewing themselves for
long periods; they are unspecialized; and they can give rise to
specialized cell types.
Stem cells are unspecialized. One of the fundamental
properties of a stem cell is that it does not have any tissue-specific
structures that allow it to perform specialized functions. A stem cell
cannot work with its neighbors to pump blood through the body (like a
heart muscle cell); it cannot carry molecules of oxygen through the
bloodstream (like a red blood cell); and it cannot fire electrochemical
signals to other cells that allow the body to move or speak (like a
nerve cell). However, unspecialized stem cells can give rise to
specialized cells, including heart muscle cells, blood cells, nerve
cells, etc.
Stem cells are capable of dividing and renewing
themselves for long periods. Unlike muscle cells, blood cells, or nerve
cells—which do not normally replicate themselves—stem cells may
replicate many times. When cells replicate themselves many times over it
is called proliferation. A starting population of stem cells that
proliferates for many months in the laboratory can yield millions of
cells. If the resulting cells continue to be unspecialized, like the
parent stem cells, the cells are said to be capable of long-term
self-renewal.
Stem cells can give rise to specialized cells. When
unspecialized stem cells give rise to specialized cells, the process is
called differentiation. Scientists are just beginning to understand the
signals inside and outside cells that trigger stem cell differentiation.
The internal signals are controlled by a cell's genes, which are
interspersed across long strands of DNA, and carry coded instructions
for all the structures and functions of a cell. The external signals for
cell differentiation include chemicals secreted by other cells, physical
contact with neighboring cells, and certain molecules in the
microenvironment.
Adult stem cells typically generate the cell types of
the tissue in which they reside. A blood-forming adult stem cell in the
bone marrow, for example, normally gives rise to the many types of blood
cells such as red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets. Until
recently, it had been thought that a blood-forming cell in the bone
marrow—which is called a hematopoietic stem cell—could not give rise to
the cells of a very different tissue, such as nerve cells in the brain.
However, a number of experiments over the last several years have raised
the possibility that stem cells from one tissue may be able to give rise
to cell types of a completely different tissue, a phenomenon known as
plasticity. Examples of such plasticity include blood cells becoming
neurons, liver cells that can be made to produce insulin, and
hematopoietic stem cells that can develop into heart muscle. Therefore,
using adult stem cells for cell-based therapies has become a very active
area of investigation by researchers.
Scientists are trying to understand two fundamental
properties of stem cells that relate to their long-term self-renewal:
1. why can embryonic stem cells proliferate for a
year or more in the laboratory without differentiating, but most adult
stem cells cannot; and
2. what are the factors in living organisms that
normally regulate stem cell proliferation and self-renewal?
Discovering the answers to these questions may make
it possible to understand how cell proliferation is regulated during
normal embryonic development or during the abnormal cell division that
leads to cancer. Importantly, such information would enable scientists
to grow embryonic and adult stem cells more efficiently in the
laboratory.
The specific factors and conditions that allow stem
cells to remain unspecialized are of great interest to scientists. It
has taken scientists many years of trial and error to learn to grow stem
cells in the laboratory without them spontaneously differentiating into
specific cell types. For example, it took 20 years to learn how to grow
human embryonic stem cells in the laboratory following the development
of conditions for growing mouse stem cells. Therefore, an important area
of research is understanding the signals in a mature organism that cause
a stem cell population to proliferate and remain unspecialized until the
cells are needed for repair of a specific tissue. Such information is
critical for scientists to be able to grow large numbers of
unspecialized stem cells in the laboratory for further experimentation.
Therefore, many questions about stem cell
differentiation remain. For example, are the internal and external
signals for cell differentiation similar for all kinds of stem cells?
Can specific sets of signals be identified that promote differentiation
into specific cell types? Addressing these questions is critical because
the answers may lead scientists to find new ways of controlling stem
cell differentiation in the laboratory, thereby growing cells or tissues
that can be used for specific purposes including cell-based therapies."