| Literature DB >> 30972555 |
Natalia Ninkina1,2, Michail S Kukharsky3,4, Maria V Hewitt3, Ekaterina A Lysikova3, Larissa N Skuratovska5, Alexey V Deykin6, Vladimir L Buchman3,7.
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that breast milk contains a population of cells displaying many of the properties typical of stem cells. This review outlines progress made in this newly emerging field of stem cell biology and provides an analysis of the available data on purification, propagation and differentiation of certain types of progenitor cells from breast milk. The possible fates of breast milk cells, including microchimerism caused by their transmission to the distant organs of the infant, are also discussed. Unique properties of breast milk-derived stem cells, such as their unusually low tumorigenic potential and their negligible ability to form teratomas, are highlighted as obvious advantages for using these cells in regenerative therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Breast milk; Regenerative medicine; Source of human stem cells; Stem cells
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30972555 PMCID: PMC6570695 DOI: 10.1007/s13577-019-00251-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Cell ISSN: 0914-7470 Impact factor: 4.174
Fig. 1Composition of breast milk cellular component and markers of pluripotency identified in a fraction of presumptive breast milk stem cells. Available experimental evidence suggest that there is a small fraction of cells (BmSCs) displaying key properties of stem cells in breast milk amongst various types of other cells that are present. BmSCs are able to differentiate into cells of all three germ layers and the level of their pluripotency is comparable with that of human embryonic stem cells
Fig. 2Dissemination of breast milk cells throughout the body of nursed infants. A fraction of breast milk progenitor cells is able to penetrate the wall of the gastrointestinal tract of nursed infants, entering their circulatory system and populating distant organs