New Concepts of Regeneration and Renewal of Adrenal Chromaffin Cells
Nataliya V. Yaglova, Sergey S. Obernikhin, Svetlana V. Nazimova, Valentin V. Yaglov, Ekaterina P. Timokhina, Elina S. Tsomartova, Marina Y. Ivanova, Elizaveta V. Chereshneva, Tatiana A. Lomanovskaya, Dibakhan A. Tsomartova

TL;DR
This paper reviews new ideas about how adrenal chromaffin cells regenerate and renew, challenging older beliefs about their origins and behavior.
Contribution
The paper proposes new theories on the mechanisms of adrenomedullary chromaffin cell regeneration.
Findings
Chromaffin cells can proliferate postnatally, contradicting earlier beliefs.
New insights into the embryonic origin and transcriptional control of these cells are presented.
The paper suggests ways to maintain chromaffin cells in culture for regenerative medicine.
Abstract
Chromaffin cells are neuroendocrine cells found in the adrenal medulla and paraganglia. They represent enigmatic cell population with origins and properties that have undergone a change in scientific interpretations over the last few decades. Earlier concepts consider that chromaffin cells derive from neuronal progenitors, and their cell fate is similar to neurons that lack the ability to proliferate and maintain renewal of cell population in postnatal life. Growing evidence of postnatal proliferation and response to proliferative stimuli were inconsistent with traditional views and required their reassessment and further research on chromaffin cell regeneration sources. The present review summarizes data on embryonic origin and development and transcriptional control of the adrenal chromaffin cells as well as available information about their postnatal proliferation. The authors also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCongenital heart defects research · Genetics and Neurodevelopmental Disorders · Neuroblastoma Research and Treatments
