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Niche players: Spermatogonial progenitors marked by GPR125

Marco Seandel, Ilaria Falciatori, Sergey V. Shmelkov, Jiyeon Kim, Daylon James and Shahin Rafii

volume 7 | issue 2

15 January 2008
Pages: 135 - 140

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The undifferentiated spermatogonia of adult mouse testes are composed of both true stem cells and committed progenitors. It is unclear what normally prevents these adult germ cells from manifesting multipotency. The critical elements of the spermatogonial stem cell niche, while poorly understood, are thought to be composed of Sertoli cells with several other somatic cell types in close proximity. We recently discovered a novel orphan G-protein coupled receptor (GPR125) that is restricted to undifferentiated spermatogonia within the testis. GPR125 expression was maintained when the progenitor cells were extracted from the in vivo niche and propagated under growth conditions that recapitulate key elements of the niche. Such conditions preserved the ability of the cells to generate multipotent derivatives, known as multipotent adult spermatogonial derived progenitor cells (MASCs). Upon differentiation, the latter produced a variety tissues including functional endothelium, illustrating the potential applications of such cells. Thus, GPR125 represents a novel target for purifying adult stem and progenitors from tissues, with the goal of developing autologous multipotent cell lines.

Authors

Marco Seandel

Weill Cornell Medical College; New York, NY

Ilaria Falciatori

Weill Cornell Medical College; New York, NY

Sergey V. Shmelkov

Weill Cornell Medical College; New York, NY

Jiyeon Kim

Weill Cornell Medical College; New York, NY

Daylon James

Weill Cornell Medical College; New York, NY

Shahin Rafii

Weill Cornell Medical College; New York, NY


Purchase article for $19

Subscribe to this journal for $129/year