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Pituitary Cell Turnover: From Adult Stem Cell Recruitment through Differentiation to Death

García Lavandeira, Montserrat; Díaz Rodríguez, Esther; Bahar, Dilek; Rodríguez García-Rendueles, Ángela; Sousa Rodrigues, Joana; Diéguez González, Carlos; Álvarez Villamarín, Clara
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/7144
PMID: 25662152
DOI: 10.1159/000375502
ISSN: 0028-3835
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Neuroendocrinology . 2015;101(3):175-92. doi: 10.1159/000375502. (2.020Mb)
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Fecha de publicación
2015
Título de revista
NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
MeSH
Adult Stem Cells | Animals | Apoptosis | Cell Differentiation | Humans | Models, Animal | Pituitary Gland | Stem Cell Niche
Resumen
The recent demonstration using genetic tracing that in the adult pituitary stem cells are normally recruited from the niche in the marginal zone and differentiate into secretory cells in the adenopituitary has elegantly confirmed the proposal made when the pituitary stem cell niche was first discovered 5 years ago. Some of the early controversies have also been resolved. However, many questions remain, such as which are the markers that make a pituitary stem cell truly unique and the exact mechanisms that trigger recruitment from the niche. Little is known about the processes of commitment and differentiation once a stem cell has left the niche. Moreover, the acceptance that pituitary cells are renewed by stem cells implies the existence of regulated mechanisms of cell death in differentiated cells which must themselves be explained. The demonstration of an apoptotic pathway mediated by RET/caspase 3/Pit-1/Arf/p53 in normal somatotrophs is therefore an important step towards understanding how pituitary cell number is regulated. Further work will elucidate how the rates of the three processes of cell renewal, differentiation and apoptosis are balanced in tissue homeostasis after birth, but altered in pituitary hyperplasia in response to physiological stimuli such as puberty and lactation. Thus, we can aim to understand the mechanisms underlying human disease due to insufficient (hypopituitarism) or excess (pituitary tumor) cell numbers.

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