Skip to:Content
|
Bottom
Cover image for Stem cells : from hydra to man
Title:
Stem cells : from hydra to man
Publication Information:
New York, NY : Springer, 2008
Physical Description:
xv, 188 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9781402082733
Added Author:

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010206056 QH588.S83 S64 2008 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Much of our knowledge of stem cells has been inferred from studies of remarkable few species. The ability to manipulate stem cells in "model" organisms such as the mouse and a few other vertebrate species has driven our understanding of basic biology of stem cells. The power and efficiency of studying model organisms, however, comes at a cost since a few species, obviously, do not reflect natureĀ“s true diversity. Unfortunately, although all multicellular organisms seem to rely on stem cells, and although this seems to be a question of key importance for understanding the evolution of animal life, little is known about stem cells in early-branching taxa.

"Stem Cells: From Hydra to Man" illustrates that there is more than human and mouse stem cells to learn from. Reflecting an enormous growth in the knowledge of stem cells in various organisms, the book presents the conceptual language and the nature of questions, as well as a summary of the advances in our understanding of stem cells from a comparative point of view that has resulted from the development of new technology and the development of novel model organisms over the past few decades. As such this book is largely a horizon analysis of a frontier rather than a retrospective. It presents an integrative approach to animal stem cells and covers the major contributions, tools and trends in a newly emerging field: comparative stem cell biology.


Table of Contents

Jan U. LohmannNoriko FunayamaThomas C. G. BoschKiyokazu AgataPeter Ladurner and Bernhard Egger and Katrien De Mulder and Daniela Pfister and Georg Kuales and Willi Salvenmoser and Lukas ScharerStefano Tiozzo and Federico D. Brown and Anthony W. De TomasoMakoto Asashima and Akira Kurisaki and Tatsuo MichiueMasatake Osawa and Kiyotaka Hasegawa and Mariko Moriyama and Shin-Ichi NishikawaWilliam Lathrop RustIbrahim Alkatout and Holger Kalthoff
Contributorsp. xiii
1 Plant Stem Cells: Divide et Imperap. 1
2 Stem Cell System of Spongep. 17
3 Stem Cells in Immortal Hydrap. 37
4 Stem Cells in Planarianp. 59
5 The Stem Cell System of the Basal Flatworm Macrostomum lignanop. 75
6 Regeneration and Stem Cells in Ascidiansp. 95
7 In Vitro Control of Organogenesis by ActivinA Treatment of Amphibian and Mouse Stem Cellsp. 113
8 Melanocyte Stem Cells: As an Excellent Model to Study Stem Cell Biologyp. 129
9 In Vitro hESC Technology: State of the Art and Future Perspectivesp. 145
10 Tumor Stem Cells: How to Define Them and How to Find Them?p. 165
Indexp. 187
Go to:Top of Page