Archive for the ‘stem cell facts’ Category

95% Of People Who Live To 110 Are Women – You’re as old as your stem cells

Thursday, July 2nd, 2015

Cell Stem Cell Cover (smaller size)

Source:  Cell Stem Cell Journal – June 2015 [Cover Pictured]

There are currently 53 supercentenarians – people aged 110 years and over, alive in the world today; and 95% of them are female.

Ben Dulken and Anne Brunet from Stanford University (California, USA), and colleagues recently explored the underlying reasons as to why this female percentage is so high.

In June 2015, Dulken and Brunet released their findings so far and argue that it’s now time to look at the differences in regenerative decline between men and women more closely.

Armed with current knowledge about stem cell behavior and sex hormones, the researchers report there are key differences in regenerative decline between men and women: particularly involving the sex hormones estrogen and testosterone in modifying lifespan.  Previous studies report that estrogen has direct effects on stem cell populations in female mice, from increasing the number of blood stem cells to enhancing the regenerative capacity of brain stem cells.  More recent studies suggest that estrogen supplementation may increase the lifespan of male mice.

Scientists observed that:  “Longevity differs between sexes, with females being longer-lived in most mammals, including humans.”  They state: “One significant hallmark of aging is the functional decline of stem cells.”

The authors conclude: “a key question is whether the aging of stem cells differs between males and females and whether this has consequences for disease and lifespan.”

More work is now needed to understand genetic impacts and stem cell aging between the sexes.

Source:  http://www.cell.com/cell-stem-cell/home

Adult Stem Cells Found To Suppress Cancer While Dormant

Saturday, December 21st, 2013

Researchers at UCLA’s Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research have discovered a mechanism by which certain adult stem cells suppress their ability to initiate skin cancer during their dormant phase — an understanding that could be exploited for better cancer-prevention strategies.

The study, which was led by UCLA postdoctoral fellow Andrew White and William Lowry, an associate professor of molecular, cell and developmental biology who holds the Maria Rowena Ross Term Chair in Cell Biology in the UCLA College of Letters and Science, was published online Dec. 15 in the journal Nature Cell Biology.

Hair follicle stem cells, the tissue-specific adult stem cells that generate the hair follicles, are also the cells of origin for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, a common skin cancer. These stem cells cycle between periods of activation (during which they can grow) and quiescence (when they remain dormant).

The research was supported by the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, the University of California Cancer Research Coordinating Committee and the National Institutes of Health.

To read more click the UCLA source link below.

Source:  UCLA Newsroom