4.6 Article

Singular Adult Neural Stem Cells Do Not Exist

期刊

CELLS
卷 11, 期 4, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11040722

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neural stem cells; adult neurogenesis; cell lineage tracing; clonal analysis; cell heterogeneity; transcriptomics; self-renewal; neural progenitors

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This study explores the heterogeneity of adult neural stem cells, including different types of short-term and long-term self-renewing aNSCs. It also investigates regional and temporal differences in aNSC function, as well as single cell transcriptomics.
Adult neural stem cells (aNSCs) are the source for the continuous production of new neurons throughout life. This so-called adult neurogenesis has been extensively studied; the intermediate cellular stages are well documented. Recent discoveries have raised new controversies in the field, such as the notion that progenitor cells hold similar self-renewal potential as stem cells, or whether different types of aNSCs exist. Here, we discuss evidence for heterogeneity of aNSCs, including short-term and long-term self-renewing aNSCs, regional and temporal differences in aNSC function, and single cell transcriptomics. Reviewing various genetic mouse models used for targeting aNSCs and lineage tracing, we consider potential lineage relationships between Ascl1-, Gli1-, and Nestin-targeted aNSCs. We present a multidimensional model of adult neurogenesis that incorporates recent findings and conclude that stemness is a phenotype, a state of properties that can change with time, rather than a cell property, which is static and immutable. We argue that singular aNSCs do not exist.

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