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Biologists find stem cell-like functions in other types of plant cells

Released : Sunday, February 15, 2009 12:01 AM
Ordinary cells have the ability to replace lost organs in plants-a function 
previously thought to be limited to stem cells-researchers at New York 
University's Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and Utrecht University 
in the Netherlands have found. The findings, which suggest that some roles 
of stem cells in organ regeneration may be shared by other types of cells, 
are published in the latest issue of the journal Nature.
Stem cells have two known fundamental properties: they can renew themselves 
and they can give rise to specialized cells. These traits make them the 
engines for regeneration, creating new cells to replace lost organs and 
tissue. These phenomena are especially evident in plants, which continually 
re-grow their branches and roots. The center of stem cell activity is a stem 
cell niche, where stem cells are directed to perform these renewal and 
regeneration functions.
However, it's unclear how significant the stem cell niche is to 
organogenesis-the building and rebuilding of organs.
The scientists studied the plant Arabidopsis thaliana. The species is a good 
candidate for study because researchers have previously identified all of 
the genes expressed in its individual cells, which allows tracking of cells' 
identity as they regenerate.
In the study, the researchers cut off the plant's root tip, thereby excising 
the stem cell niche, and examined the return of cell identities by measuring 
all gene activity. The results suggested that stem cells returned quite late 
in regeneration after other cells were already replaced. The researchers 
then used mutant plants in which the stem cell niche no longer functions to 
confirm their initial observations. Despite the absence of the stem cell 
niche, the plant's ordinary cells worked to regenerate all the major tissues 
constituting the root tip-a process that began hours after it had been 
removed.
However, researchers found that plants without functional stem cell niches 
could not resume normal growth, showing that other cells did not replace all 
functions of stem cells.
Scientists have recently shown that manipulating non-stem cells in mammals 
to express several genes could convert those cells into stem cells-a process 
known as reprogramming. In 2008, a Nature study conducted at the Harvard 
Stem Cell Institute recreated pancreatic cells in mice into another type of 
cell that produces insulin without the aid of stem cells. In the NYU-Utrecht 
study, the researchers sought to determine if entire organs regenerate in 
plants absent of stem cells without using genetic manipulation.
"You could think of these findings as a massive reprogramming of an organ's 
identity without the need for a stem cell niche," said Kenneth Birnbaum, an 
assistant professor of biology at NYU whose lab conducted the research. 
"Here is a case of an organism that can perform this kind of reprogramming 
naturally. This may be one reason why plants are so adept at regenerating 
their body parts."
Copyright 2009 NewsRx Health via VerticalNews.com

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Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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