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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Stem Cells and the Endometrium: From the Discovery of Adult Stem Cells to Pre-Clinical Models.

Lucía De Miguel-gómezIrene CervellóAntonio PellicerEmilio Francés-herreroSara López-martínezAdolfo Rodríguez-eguren

subject

0301 basic medicineStromal cellCell- and Tissue-Based TherapyEndometriosisBone Marrow CellsReviewBiologyStem cell marker03 medical and health sciencesEndometriumMice0302 clinical medicinestem cellsParacrine CommunicationmedicineAnimalsHumansCell LineageStem Cell Nichelcsh:QH301-705.5030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicineLeiomyomaLGR5Cell DifferentiationMesenchymal Stem CellsGeneral Medicineanimal modelsEndometrial NeoplasmsEndothelial stem cellAdult Stem Cellsniche030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:Biology (General)regenerationEndometrial HyperplasiaCancer researchCD146FemaleBone marrowStem cellAdenomyosisAdult stem cell

description

Adult stem cells (ASCs) were long suspected to exist in the endometrium. Indeed, several types of endometrial ASCs were identified in rodents and humans through diverse isolation and characterization techniques. Putative stromal and epithelial stem cell niches were identified in murine models using label-retention techniques. In humans, functional methods (clonogenicity, long-term culture, and multi-lineage differentiation assays) and stem cell markers (CD146, SUSD2/W5C5, LGR5, NTPDase2, SSEA-1, or N-cadherin) facilitated the identification of three main types of endogenous endometrial ASCs: stromal, epithelial progenitor, and endothelial stem cells. Further, exogenous populations of stem cells derived from bone marrow may act as key effectors of the endometrial ASC niche. These findings are promoting the development of stem cell therapies for endometrial pathologies, with an evolution towards paracrine approaches. At the same time, promising therapeutic alternatives based on bioengineering have been proposed.

10.3390/cells10030595https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33800355