Bone marrow cells adopt the phenotype of other cells by spontaneous cell fusion
- PMID: 11932747
- DOI: 10.1038/nature730
Bone marrow cells adopt the phenotype of other cells by spontaneous cell fusion
Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that transplanted bone marrow cells can turn into unexpected lineages including myocytes, hepatocytes, neurons and many others. A potential problem, however, is that reports discussing such 'transdifferentiation' in vivo tend to conclude donor origin of transdifferentiated cells on the basis of the existence of donor-specific genes such as Y-chromosome markers. Here we demonstrate that mouse bone marrow cells can fuse spontaneously with embryonic stem cells in culture in vitro that contains interleukin-3. Moreover, spontaneously fused bone marrow cells can subsequently adopt the phenotype of the recipient cells, which, without detailed genetic analysis, might be interpreted as 'dedifferentiation' or transdifferentiation.
Comment in
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Stem cells: cell fusion causes confusion.Nature. 2002 Apr 4;416(6880):485-7. doi: 10.1038/416485a. Nature. 2002. PMID: 11932725 No abstract available.
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