Metabolic regulation of somatic stem cells in vivo
- PMID: 35228719
- DOI: 10.1038/s41580-022-00462-1
Metabolic regulation of somatic stem cells in vivo
Abstract
Metabolism has been studied mainly in cultured cells or at the level of whole tissues or whole organisms in vivo. Consequently, our understanding of metabolic heterogeneity among cells within tissues is limited, particularly when it comes to rare cells with biologically distinct properties, such as stem cells. Stem cell function, tissue regeneration and cancer suppression are all metabolically regulated, although it is not yet clear whether there are metabolic mechanisms unique to stem cells that regulate their activity and function. Recent work has, however, provided evidence that stem cells do have a metabolic signature that is distinct from that of restricted progenitors and that metabolic changes influence tissue homeostasis and regeneration. Stem cell maintenance throughout life in many tissues depends upon minimizing anabolic pathway activation and cell division. Consequently, stem cell activation by tissue injury is associated with changes in mitochondrial function, lysosome activity and lipid metabolism, potentially at the cost of eroding self-renewal potential. Stem cell metabolism is also regulated by the environment: stem cells metabolically interact with other cells in their niches and are able to sense and adapt to dietary changes. The accelerating understanding of stem cell metabolism is revealing new aspects of tissue homeostasis with the potential to promote tissue regeneration and cancer suppression.
© 2022. Springer Nature Limited.
References
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- Agathocleous, M. et al. Ascorbate regulates haematopoietic stem cell function and leukaemogenesis. Nature 549, 476–481 (2017). This work shows that the metabolic profile of HSCs is distinct from that of restricted progenitors and that ascorbate is required to regulate HSC function, haematopoietic regeneration and leukaemia suppression. - PubMed - PMC - DOI
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