Stem Cells and Cloning (TEST 3) Flashcards

1
Q

Cell differentiation

A

development of cells from the unspecialized embryonic state to their differentiated specific state

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2
Q

Stem Cells

A

undifferentiated cells capable of giving rise to an infinite amount more of the same type of cell+some other types of cells

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3
Q

Tissue Stem Cells

A

capable of replenishing cells within certain organs

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4
Q

Embryonic Stem Cells

A

undifferentiated with ability to become ANY kind of cell

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5
Q

Cells within the blastocyst?

A

Cells that are undifferentiated early on and thus have capability to become anything (very flexible)

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6
Q

How does MZT development work?

A

Each half of the embryo controls its own development until the late blastula stage

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7
Q

What does removing cells from developing embryo do to its fate?

A

Nothing! The embryo will continue to develop just fine

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8
Q

Totipotent

A

can differentiate into cell type in the body plus the extraembryonic cells (e.g. placenta

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9
Q

Pluripotent

A

can differentiate into any of the three germ layers: endoderm (interior stomach lining, gastrointestinal tract, the lungs), mesoderm (muscle, bone, blood, urogenital), or ectoderm (epidermal tissues and nervous system).

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10
Q

Multipotent

A

partially differentiated and commited to forming certain cell types

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11
Q

Unipotent

A

produces one cell type

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12
Q

2 ways to regulate transcription?

A

1) Epigenetic factors (methylation)

2 Transcription Factors (promote or inhibit gene exp)

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13
Q

3 Epigenetic regulations of transcriptions?

A

1) Histone acetylation/deacytylation relaxes or conensing chromatin
2) Methylation of DNA so that it can’t access transcription factors
3) MicroRNA degrading mRNA

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14
Q

What are the three stem cell criteria?

A

1) must be undifferentiated
2Unlimited self renewal
3)Two types of daughter cells: new stem
cells and committed progenitor cells

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15
Q

How do Tissue stem cells work?

A

reside in niches of cells

and extracellular matrix (ECM). Signals (open arrows) from the niche maintain stem cells in their state

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16
Q

Local Asymmetry Model

A

One daughter cell is stem cell while other is progenator cell

17
Q

Serial Asymmetry Model

A

Daughter cells sometimes stem cells and sometimes both progenators

18
Q

Embryonic Stem Cells

A

Pluripotent The inner cell mass (ICM) of

the mammalian blastocyst gives rise to the embryo proper

19
Q

Chimera

A

organism composed of two or more different populations of genetically distinct cells that originated from different zygotes

20
Q

What is the complementation test for potency?

A

Cells to be tested (red) are injected into carrier blastocysts, which are then brought to term by foster females.
Morphological and genetic markers reveal the contributions of the test cells, which may form many cell types or the entire organism.

21
Q

What are the NIH funding rules for embryonic stem cells? (9)

A
  1. hESCs derived for in vitro fertilization and are
    no longer needed
  2. Voluntary consent from patient
  3. No cash for embryos
  4. Decision to donate or not cannot affect quality
    of care to patient
  5. Physician responsible for reproductive clinical care and the hESC researcher should not be
    the same person
  6. Patient can change their mind
  7. No hESCs in non-human primate blastocysts
  8. No research involving breeding animals where
    hESCs contribute to the germ line.
  9. No new stem cell lines from discarded embryos or destroying existing embryos
22
Q

What is the deal with cloned potatos?

A

Each row of plants is derived from a single

protoplast grown into a plant and then propagated asexually.

23
Q

How does reproductive cloning work?

A

1) Enucleate
2) Get donor nucleus
3) Renuecleate recipient

24
Q

Why are mammals hard to clone? (3 reasons)

A
  • In mammals , ~1% of genes are imprinted (silenced) by methylation or other epigenetic mechanisms.
  • Imprinting is erased in primordial germ cells and then renewed in sex-specific ways during gametogenesis.
  • After fertilization, Mom are Dad’s genomes are united, including their imprinted genes.
25
Q

Reproductive cloning

A

Growing a baby in mother uterus

26
Q

Therapeutic Cloning

A

manipulating embryonic stem cells or equivalents in vitro for the purpose of cell or organ replacement therapies.