| Literature DB >> 35057814 |
P Martinez1,2, L Ballarin3, A V Ereskovsky4,5,6, E Gazave7, B Hobmayer8, L Manni3, E Rottinger9,10, S G Sprecher11, S Tiozzo12, A Varela-Coelho13, B Rinkevich14.
Abstract
Stem cells (SCs) in vertebrates typically reside in "stem cell niches" (SCNs), morphologically restricted tissue microenvironments that are important for SC survival and proliferation. SCNs are broadly defined by properties including physical location, but in contrast to vertebrates and other "model" organisms, aquatic invertebrate SCs do not have clearly documented niche outlines or properties. Life strategies such as regeneration or asexual reproduction may have conditioned the niche architectural variability in aquatic or marine animal groups. By both establishing the invertebrates SCNs as independent types, yet allowing inclusiveness among them, the comparative analysis will allow the future functional characterization of SCNs.Entities:
Keywords: Adult stem cell (ASCs); Germline stem cells (GSCs); Marine/aquatic organisms; Phyletic diversity; Self-renewal; Stem cell niche (SCN)
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35057814 PMCID: PMC8781081 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-022-01230-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Schematic illustrations for some of the best-characterized stem cell niches. A Human hematopoietic SCN: This is one of the best-characterized niches, with the hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) receiving systemic and local signals. The niche is perivascular, created partly by mesenchymal stromal cells and endothelial cells and often but not always located near trabecular bones (diagram based on [39]). B Drosophila melanogaster gonadal niche (based on [40]): A germarium with mature oocytes in the proximal region and cap cells in the distant region. The latter cells comprise the major component of the niche and maintain permanent contact with developing germinal cells (here, oocytes, though the sperm cells reside in a similarly constructed niche). C Caenorhabditis elegans gonadal niche: The germinal line differentiates in a distal-to-proximal direction, with the DTCs (distal tip cells) as key components of the niche (based on [41]). D Hydra I-cell site location (diagram based on [20]): here a stem cell (I-cell) resides within the epidermal epithelium. Both stem cells and their precursors are maintained via a collection of signals and interactions with the ECM. Precursors not only attach to the ECM but exhibit the capacity to penetrate it and thereby move into the endodermal epithelium. More details on each niche type are provided in the text
Fig. 2Unified current view for the structure and properties of the niche in model organisms. This illustration presents the most significant basic structures assumed to define a stem cell niche, as derived from studies of vertebrates’ hematopoietic systems (and of other SCNs in various organs) and the germ cell niches of the non-ecdysozoan model invertebrates Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans. At the top, we list the four physiological properties associated with niche functionality (derived from [69]). The different cellular, signaling, and matrix components affiliated with SCN activities are further depicted (based on [70]). Variations in the presence of the different components occur in different animal systems (and may also be explained by a current lack of knowledge)
Fig. 3A conceptual ideograph representing the three distinct architectures for the stem cell niche notion in metazoans. A, B, and C refer to three structurally defined states assigned to describe the progressively complex architecture of niches and their cognate locations in an animal’s body. State A represents statuses with no connatural niche, where individual cells bear stem cell properties in their own existence, and cell fates are regulated through interactions with abutting cells. A cellular example that fills this criterion is: CTVT = canine transmissible venereal tumor. State B extends conceptual niches to the level of the whole tissue or the whole animal, which, by abductive reasoning, provide the appropriate habitat and foundation for the numerous SCs that reside and proliferate within a permanently existing niche holograph. The State C prototype epitomizes the well-structured and enduring model SCNs (typical of vertebrates) along with cases of ephemeral SCNs. Transitory niches = niches that are functional for a short period of time (about 1 or 2 weeks in botryllid ascidians), prior to ASCs departing the SCN—in concert with SCN degradation—and moving through vasculature to newly developed SCNs. Note that although sponges are presented here within the state A category, different clades bear state A and B architectures
Traits and properties assigned to the three distinct niche states
| Property/trait | A | B | C |
|---|---|---|---|
| Structural support | No, ASCs are niche-like independent entities | No, whole tissue/organism consideration | Yes, spatially confined |
| Maintenance and regulation of ASCs | At the level of each specific ASC | Loosely- on the whole organ/tissue/organism level | Tight |
| Cell-cell interactions | Stochastic, local interactions | Stochastic- on the whole organ/tissue/organism level | ASCs interact with specific niche cells (adhesive interactions) |
| Cell- environment interactions | Indistinguishable between somatic cells and ASCs | Stochastic- on the whole organ/tissue/organism level | ASCs interact with specific cues from the environment |
| Physiological cues | Indistinguishable between somatic cells and ASCs | Stochastic- on the whole organ/tissue/organism level | Yes |
| Trophic support | No | Unknown | Yes |
| topographical features | No | No | Yes |
| Niche functionality | No | No | Yes |
| ASC fates | Independent to any specific microenvironment | Independent to any specific microenvironment | Linked with their homing niche |
| ASCs- cell cycle modifications | Stochastic | Stochastic | Specified to niches |
| Regulation | At the ASC level | At the entire organism/tissue levels | At the niche level |
| Peak potency of ASCs | Totipotency and pluripotency | Totipotency and pluripotency | Multipotency (few cases of pluripotency) |
Key characteristics distinguishing A and B SCN states
| Character | State A | State B |
|---|---|---|
| Pluripotent at most | Totipotent (developing the soma/germ cell lineages). | |
| At the SC level | At the entire organism/whole tissue levels | |
| No. niche. Each ASC may sustain its own private self-regulation intimate environment | The entire organism/whole tissue constructions | |
| Self-regulating (cancer cells, archaeocytes, choanocytes) | Systemic | |
| Highly motile | Restricted motility | |
| Random (archaeocytes, cancer cells) | More ordered in the animal milieu (sponge choanocytes, pinacocytes, I-cells in Hydra, neoblasts in flatworms) |