BP - The Cell
BP - The Cell
THE CELL
Insider knowledge
Revealing the secrets of your cells
What are cells for? How do cells divide, develop and communicate? What are stem cells and why are they important? What happens when cells die?
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Big Picture
Big Picture
Big Picture is a free resource for teachers, school and college students, and learners of any age. Published twice a year, each issue comes as a printed magazine with accompanying online articles and other content. Heres how to get the most from your issue.
COntents
Introducing the cell
A close-up look at the structure of animal cells.
Stem cells and development Stem cells and the future Real voices
What are stem cells and how are they used in medical research? What might developments in stem cell science mean for us? Three peoples stories about the roles of cells in their lives.
potential for
Stem cells
What do we mean by
stem cells?
which again. In heart failure, things can result from many diet and such as infection, poor is an high blood pressure, there heart that increased load on the
In this stimulates hypertrophy. in case, despite the increase actually size, heart performance worsens.
Cross-section of bone.
JANUARY 2011 11
THE CELL
be all its descendants will If a differentiated cell divides, do more, other. A stem cell can identical to it and each differentiated cells. Theyre producing stem cells and on means that they can go also self-renewing, which and on dividing. can potency how much they Stem cells vary in their of products the and egg differentiate. A newly fertilised totipotent cells. These made of its rst few divisions are cell type in the body, including cells can give rise to any produce a whole organism. the placenta, and so can egg in a few steps beyond the Embryonic stem cells, they can become any development, are pluripotent organism. whole a not but type of specialised cell, of can make just a few types Multipotent cells, which red marrow that can generate cell, include those in bone found adult stem cells (those or white blood cells. Most and organs) are multipotent. in differentiated tissues just one those in the skin, make Unipotent cells, such as usually where lots of new fully differentiated cell type, cells are needed regularly. transitions between the on focuses A lot of research is whether pluripotent these states. A basic question by default, or need some cells carry on as they are them to stop differentiating. continuing signal to remind cells that embryonic stems Research strongly suggests cells, as keep making more stem are self-sustaining, and protein signals from a particular long as they receive no that triggers cell differentiation.
digestive range of hormones and of the Each cell type is specialised enzymes. Small regions c Islets of for the role it plays; speci pancreas known as the from different characteristics range Langerhans contain four general make making key proteins to cell types, which each Red blood most properties like shape. different hormones. The small cells beta cells, for example, are there common cells shape biconcave discs. This make insulin and amylin. area, specialise? gives a large surface cells How do oxygen a signal helping the cells to ship A stem cell will receive tissues, that from the lungs to the from its surroundings dioxide pattern and a little of the carbon triggers a change in the on and turned the other way. are that of genes a The shape also gives off, directing the cell towards cells Having exibility, helping the more specialised state. smallest g of squeeze through the a detailed understandin red blood they capillaries. Developing these changes and how and us to cells begin with a nucleus are triggered may allow before organelles, but lose them control them. in effect they start work, which full reduces the cells to bags EM Unit, UCL Medical of haemoglobin, the protein School, Royal Free Campus carbon that carries oxygen and distorted, dioxide. If the shape is example, disease can result. For sicklein the inherited disease blood cell anaemia, some red cells become sickle-shaped owing to abnormal haemoglobin molecules clumping together. Organs often contain The blood cells. sub-populations of cells. Sickled and normal red makes a pancreas, for instance,
control the If we can learn how to cells we might be able differentiation of stem of cell damage in the to remedy many kinds cells are pluripotent, body. Embryonic stem but their use and so the most versatile, (for more, see is not without controversy pages 1213). companies use Some pharmaceutical drugs. Stem cells new test stem cells to
including for studying specic diseases muscular dystrophy Huntingtons, Parkinsons, have been made by and type 1 diabetes from patients into a reprogramming adult cells stem cells would pluripotent state. Pluripotent to test drugs give researchers the chance if they can only but on different types of cell, how and when develop ways of controlling these stem cells differentiate. found in Adult stem cells (those organs) are differentiated tissues and in potentially useful too. Researchers single adult using are Cambridge, for example, the biological signals skin stem cells to explore
Annie Cavanagh
of embryonic kidney
cells.
. This approach involved in cell differentiation drugs for, in this can also be used to screen tissues. instance, repairing damaged
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University of Edinburgh
4
Medical illustration copyright 2010 Nucleus Medical Art, all rights reserved.
www.nucleusinc.
Transmission electron
micrograph of epithelial
(skin) cells.
This way up
Direction is important
Stem cell therapies already in use in the form of bone marrow of transplants the rst which was performed in 1956. Source:
www.biotechlearn.org.nz
including A cells development its direction is constantly inuenced by the cells surrounding it. An epithelial sheet, for example, is the asymmetric. One face to apical surface is exposed the gut, the watery contents of The or to the air in the lungs. surface opposite face the basal of sits on supporting layers tissue. collagen and connective into Cells that secrete molecules membrane the gut need different bottom, proteins at the top and for and so do those specialised
Munich
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title topic. Intro This sets the scene for the spread within the issue, and the wider world. Article Each article can be used alongside others from the same spread or the rest of the issue, or as a standalone component for a lesson. Image/diagram Illustrations and diagrams help you express complex ideas in a visual way, as well as helping to place the issues in question into a real-life context.
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are poised to break down the material into smaller molecules. Cell theory was put forward in the 1830s, soon after the cell nucleus was rst identied in eukaryotes. It recognised that living things are made of cells, that cells are the basic units of life, and that new cells are created by old ones dividing into two. Viruses simple entities of genes and protein need to get into a cell and hijack its cytoplasmic machinery to copy themselves. We describe these as acellular, and they are not considered to be living. In this issue, well be focusing on animal cells how they reproduce, grow, move, communicate and die. So join us to explore what we know as well as what we still dont understand about the cells that are the basis of all of us.
microtubules small, tubular assemblies of protein, made from repeating tubulin subunits, which help maintain the cells internal structure and move organelles and cytoplasm using molecular motors. Part of the cytoskeleton vacuoles internal bags, surrounded by a membrane, which cells use for storage of food or waste microlaments smaller than microtubules, these are made from repeating actin subunits. Responsible for cell movement and changes in shape, and make muscle contraction possible. Part of the cytoskeleton centrioles a pair of organelles that organises microtubules into spindles on which chromosomes are separated when cells divide Golgi apparatus one of the wondrously complex membrane systems in the cytoplasm, which modies, packages and directs newly made proteins to where they are needed
lysosomes membrane-bound organelles that are the cells rubbish disposal and recycling units; contain hydrolytic enzymes
extracellular matrix the material in between cells that holds tissues together, usually made of scaffolding proteins such as collagen
nucleus the information centre of the eukaryotic cell, where the DNA is stored, replicated and copied into RNA (transcribed) nuclear envelope double membrane that separates the contents of the nucleus from the cytoplasm
nuclear pores gaps in the nuclear envelope that allow substances to move in and out of the nucleus
cytoplasm everything in the cell outside the nucleus; a viscous uid containing proteins, other organic and inorganic molecules, membranes and organelles
endoplasmic reticulum (ER) an extensive network of membranes. Rough ER is studded with ribosomes and is a site where proteins are made, modied and processed for shipping. The roles of smooth ER include lipid and steroid synthesis and drug detoxication mitochondria (singular: mitochondrion) rod-shaped bodies in the cytoplasm that supply chemical energy to the rest of the cell ribosomes molecular machines, built from RNA and protein, that make new proteins. They are found in the cytoplasm and bound to the rough endoplasmic reticulum
plasma membrane a phospholipid bilayer that contains cholesterol and proteins. It surrounds the cell and enables it to communicate with its neighbours and detect and respond to changes in the environment
JANUARY 2011 3
Big Picture
Dividing we stand
Cell division is a tightly controlled process.
The most complex thing a cell can do is to split into two identical cells. In actively reproducing cells, this begins with the copying of the cells contents, including the chromosomes. The duplicates separate into different halves of the cell and then, during mitosis, the cell splits down the middle and then the cycle starts again. A more complex type of cell division, meiosis, which generates eggs or sperm, has an extra stage. Each chromosome pair is separated, so that each cell has a single chromosome. Seen under a microscope, the dance of the chromosomes looks magical, but it has a precise molecular mechanism. The movements of the chromosomes, like those of the cell, are controlled by microtubules. These are long tubes of protein subunits, which can assemble, break down and reassemble very quickly in a different arrangement. Microtubules play a crucial role in mitosis, rearranging themselves from their usual place in the cytoskeleton to build a complicated machine called the mitotic spindle, whose other parts include motor proteins. The spindle grabs hold of the chromosomes and lines them up. It pulls the pair of chromatids that make up each chromosome in opposite directions so they end up in different halves of the cell. The whole process is a carefully orchestrated sequence of movements involving hundreds of different proteins. A key component is the protein complex (two or more proteins that associate with each other) that assembles on chromosomes and provides a place for microtubules to latch on to, known as the kinetochore. Cell division is a very active area of research because it is one of the key cellular processes that goes wrong in cancer.
Paul J Smith and Rachel Errington
The Golgi apparatus, which processes and packages proteins in the cell.
Seeing is believing
Cells were rst seen over 300 years ago.
No one knew that cells existed before the invention of the microscope. Robert Hooke in 1665 saw spaces in dead sections of cork that he called cells, and the Dutch pioneer Anthony van Leeuwenhoek was astonished by living cells 20 years later. The insides of cells were observed much later, with more powerful light microscopes. Even the best light microscopes, though, can
only show objects larger than 0.2 m (micrometres, millionths of a metre). Electron microscopes can go smaller still. Today, they can even show how single molecules of newly made protein nestle inside the chaperone proteins that help them fold up into their proper shape. Analysing images of hundreds of these protein complexes has shown just how they t together. Understanding how proteins fold properly is important, because misfolded proteins can accumulate and cause diseases such as Alzheimers.
Whos in control?
Your cells contain the same genome but different genes are in use.
The store of genes in the cell nucleus, the genome, makes your cells human. But every human has around 200 different cell types, each with an identical gene store. The differences lie in which genes are actually in use. Specic sets of genes are switched on and off as cells start to adopt specialised functions during development, a process called differentiation. The genes, in turn, will generate unique patterns of RNA messages from reading the DNA that is in use, and a signature population of proteins and smaller regulatory molecules. These patterns change in response to gene signals, the contents of the cytoplasm and messages from outside the cell. The result is a complex developmental conversation. At one level, the nucleus is in charge of the cell. But there is also a sense in which the cell, with its surroundings, is in charge of the information store in the nucleus, and how it gets used. Scientists have decoded the entire human genome, but that does not give a picture of which information is active in any cell. This is registered in the transcriptome (the complete catalogue of messenger RNA molecules in a cell), and the proteome (the list of all the different proteins present). Unlike the genome, these are constantly shifting, so each is a snapshot in the life of the cell. How the transcriptome and proteome are tweaked by small changes in the cells circumstances is one of the biggest topics in current biological research.
Dr David Furness
No limits?
Why dont our cells go on dividing for ever?
It is important to have just the right amount of cell division, so the process has lots of checks and balances. If the controls fail, there is a nal limit. Each time a chromosome is copied, a repetitive stretch of DNA at its end, the telomere, gets shorter. The telomere is needed for the proteins that copy DNA to work properly, so when it is all gone there is no more chromosome copying, and no more cell division. In effect, telomeres count cell divisions. Human cells can normally manage between 40 and 60 divisions this is called the Hayick limit, named after Leonard Hayicks 1965 discovery. Stem cells, and many cancer cells, can get round this limit using the enzyme telomerase, which rebuilds the ends of chromosomes.
Snaprender/iStockphoto
The inside of the cell is a scene of constant motion. Soluble molecules move around apparently randomly in the cytoplasm, but many components are transported more precisely. Many proteins are allowed only into one of the cellular compartments. Cells also have an elaborate network of ne protein laments (strands), an interior cytoskeleton, which helps them keep their shape and provides the rails of a transport system. Small protein motors pull little bags, or vesicles, of cell products up or down microtubules or actin laments. Special labels ensure the right cargo is sent to the right destination. These are usually proteins, or parts of proteins, sticking out of the vesicle. The same system also moves organelles around or anchors them in place. The cell uses a lot of energy for all this transport, but it needs to speed things along. A protein molecule might take years to travel the length of the longest nerve cell by simple diffusion, but if it is bagged up and dragged along a microtubule it can cover 10 cm in a day. This is vastly more than most distances within cells, and means that even the ends of the long, drawn-out extensions of nerve cells, the axons, in your ngers or toes can be reached in a few days.
Under development
Controlled cell division is a key part of development.
Perhaps the most remarkable fact in biology is that the several tens of trillions (1 trillion = 1 000 000 000 000) of cells that make you develop from a single cell a fertilised ovum, or zygote. Controlled cell division is crucial for development. The dividing cells in the embryo are also differentiating and forming structures that fold, get reshaped, or even migrate to different locations. Disruption of one of the many genes involved in controlling all these subtle shifts increases the risk of developmental defects. The effects of these defects may be felt much later on in adult life, not just at birth.
JANUARY 2011 5
Yorgos Nikas
include growth factors and signal molecules, which affect many processes, including cell migration. Some come from the cells that make the matrix, some from other cell types and the cells, in turn, respond to the mix of signals as it changes over time.
FAST FACT
Human eggs are made in the embryo, so the egg cell that fused with a sperm to become you was actually produced around six months before your mum was born.
Big Picture
A society of cells
How do cells organise in an organism?
The human body is a closely organised community of cells. Tissues, collections of similar cells, work together in groups to form an organ. These organs work with each other in organ systems. The liver, for instance, is made up of 80 per cent of one kind of cell, hepatocytes, which make, store or secrete many proteins, fats and digestive enzymes. The remaining 20 per cent consists of several other specialised liver cell types, along with blood vessels, nerve cells and others. All have to work together for the liver to do its job. To keep the whole organism functioning correctly, most organs or organ systems also have to respond to the state of other organs, which may be a long way away. For a smooth-running community, cells need good communication. They manage this in different ways, but all use either chemical or electrical signals. Nerve cells, for example, send electrical signals down their long bres, but communicate with the next cell in the chain by sending chemicals across a tiny gap at the synapse. Heart muscle cells, on the other hand, join to their neighbours via gap junctions. At these points, the cells are close enough together for protein complexes with tiny channels inside to span both cell membranes, and allow small molecules and ions to pass between them. This allows waves of depolarisation to pass along a series of heart cells and keep the heart beating regularly.
Heart, showing the coronary arteries.
Communication breakdown
When messages between cells are blocked or scrambled, there are usually harmful results. Autoimmune diseases, in which our own immune cells attack body tissues, are partly due to errors in identifying cells. In multiple sclerosis, misdirected T cells remove the insulating sheath around nerve bres, while tumours begin when cells ignore messages telling them not to replicate, or when they misread signals to keep dividing. Teratomas (tumours that can contain hair, teeth and bone) arise from germ cells (sperm and eggs) that are triggered to begin dividing inside the body.
Dr David Furness
Maurizio De Angelis
FAST FACT
A man makes 1500 sperm per heartbeat
Source: Science 328(5974):15.
Joyce Harper, UCL
JANUARY 2011 7
Karin Hing
Big Picture
lens of the eye, which become inert once they are in place in the embryo, cells in heart muscle and, perhaps most importantly, neurons in the brain (see below). Counting all the cells a person ever has would take several lifetimes. The average turnover of all human cells in different tissues is seven to ten years, so the lifetime cell count is perhaps ten times the adult total (at least several tens of trillions of cells). That ignores a lot of other cells, like the 180 or so types of bacteria and other microorganisms that live in and on our bodies. Its thought that each of us carries ten times as many of these cells as we have our own, human cells.
are small. The vast majority of neurons in the brain of the oldest man or woman have been there for their entire lifetime. It was discovered in the 1990s that the hippocampus, where new memories form, can produce new neurons late in life. Since then, evidence has mounted that stem cells that make extra neurons are found in the cerebral cortex as well, at least in mice and monkeys. If further work conrms this nding, researchers will want to know whether the cells can be activated, to help heal injuries such as stroke or even, perhaps, improve brain function.
FAST FACT
Chemotherapy can lead to hair loss because the hair follicle epithelial cells like cancer cells divide rapidly, and hence are also targets of many anticancer drugs.
Source: Scientic American, 5 January 2001.
ker
Human chromosomes.
Getting on a bit
Ageing cells have a number of tell-tale signs.
Over time, the waste disposal can get clogged up. Old, tangled proteins and other cellular junk defy the lysosomal enzymes. Remnants of fatty acids are a particular problem and they make up a big portion of the yellowish pigment granules known as lipofuscin, whose appearance is a sure sign of an ageing cell. Other signs of cell ageing, such as
shortening of the telomeres on the ends of the chromosomes, are related to how many times the cell has divided. Most, though, are the result of normal wear and tear. Mitochondria age faster than other organelles. Their job of energy production exposes them to reactive chemicals free radicals that can damage DNA. Mitochondria have some essential genes in their own DNA, and the proportion of them that have serious defects increases as the person, and their cells, grow older.
Waste disposal
How do cells dispose of their unwanted parts?
Cells are continually making new molecules, while old ones are broken down and recycled. The main site for this is the lysosome, which acts as a cellular stomach. A typical human cell has about a hundred lysosomes, each a collection of potent hydrolytic enzymes, which break down substances, enclosed in a membrane. Old organelles, other cellular waste and, in immune system cells, old red blood cells or bacteria swallowed by the cell are all wrapped in membranes of their own. These then fuse with the lysosome, where they are quickly broken down into small molecules for re-use. In cases where one of the lysosomal enzymes fails, the cell cannot keep up with removing waste. In the rare genetic condition TaySachs disease, for example, an enzyme that mops up a fatty chemical in neurons is defective. The chemical, a ganglioside, accumulates and eventually destroys cells in the brain and spinal cord, causing a progressive loss of mental and physical function that usually results in death before the age of ve. The right packaging is also crucial for recycling and disposal. Cells constantly pinch off bits of outer membrane, turning a small pit in the membrane into a vesicle, which is brought inside. Larger vesicles import material from outside. The vesicles then fuse with an extensive network of tubes and bags, known as endosomes, which sort incoming material. New vesicles bud off from here, and shift designated contents onward to other parts of the cell, back to the outer membrane or to the lysosomes. Cell surface receptors are recycled as part of this process, too.
e Centr
FAST FACT
al Ge
gion ex R e
The 2009 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine went to Elizabeth Blackburn, Carol Greider and Jack Szostak for their work on how chromosomes are protected by telomeres and the enzyme telomerase.
Source: www.nobelprize.org
netics
Wess
JANUARY 2011 9
Spike Wal
So long, cells
Big Picture
Stem cells
What do we mean by stem cells?
If a differentiated cell divides, all its descendants will be identical to it and each other. A stem cell can do more, producing stem cells and differentiated cells. Theyre also self-renewing, which means that they can go on and on dividing. Stem cells vary in their potency how much they can differentiate. A newly fertilised egg and the products of its rst few divisions are made of totipotent cells. These cells can give rise to any cell type in the body, including the placenta, and so can produce a whole organism. Embryonic stem cells, a few steps beyond the egg in development, are pluripotent they can become any type of specialised cell, but not a whole organism. Multipotent cells, which can make just a few types of cell, include those in bone marrow that can generate red or white blood cells. Most adult stem cells (those found in differentiated tissues and organs) are multipotent. Unipotent cells, such as those in the skin, make just one fully differentiated cell type, usually where lots of new cells are needed regularly. A lot of research focuses on the transitions between these states. A basic question is whether pluripotent cells carry on as they are by default, or need some continuing signal to remind them to stop differentiating. Research strongly suggests that embryonic stems cells are self-sustaining, and keep making more stem cells, as long as they receive no signals from a particular protein that triggers cell differentiation.
This way up
Direction is important in cells development and function.
A cells development including its direction is constantly inuenced by the cells surrounding it. An epithelial sheet, for example, is asymmetric. One face the apical surface is exposed to the watery contents of the gut, or to the air in the lungs. The opposite face the basal surface sits on supporting layers of collagen and connective tissue. Cells that secrete molecules into the gut need different membrane proteins at the top and bottom, and so do those specialised for absorption. The cell keeps track of which end is which, so that molecules go the right way. A more complex example is found in the ear, where a type of epithelial cell in the inner ear turns vibrational signals into electrical messages so we can hear. These hair cells, which have a bundle of ne cilia, have a top and bottom, but have to be arranged in the right direction along another axis as well. If they lose this orientation, or planar polarity, the sense of hearing may be impaired.
University of Edinburgh
for studying specic diseases including Huntingtons, Parkinsons, muscular dystrophy and type 1 diabetes have been made by reprogramming adult cells from patients into a pluripotent state. Pluripotent stem cells would give researchers the chance to test drugs on different types of cell, but only if they can develop ways of controlling how and when these stem cells differentiate. Adult stem cells (those found in differentiated tissues and organs) are potentially useful too. Researchers in Cambridge, for example, are using single adult skin stem cells to explore the biological signals
Annie Cavanagh
involved in cell differentiation. This approach can also be used to screen drugs for, in this instance, repairing damaged tissues.
Medical illustration copyright 2010 Nucleus Medical Art, all rights reserved. www.nucleusinc.
FAST FACT
Stem cell therapies are already in use in the form of bone marrow transplants the rst of which was performed in 1956. Source:
www.biotechlearn.org.nz
again. In heart failure, which can result from many things such as infection, poor diet and high blood pressure, there is an increased load on the heart that
stimulates hypertrophy. In this case, despite the increase in size, heart performance actually worsens.
Cross-section of bone.
JANUARY 2011 11
Big Picture
It was easy to donate my cord blood and I hope that one day the stem cells in my sample will help someone who needs them.
I dont feel comfortable donating my umbilical cord blood who knows what they might be able to do with it in the future?
Question: Should it become obligatory for women who give birth to donate their umbilical cord blood for research?
1998: Scientists at the University of Wisconsin isolate and grow the rst stem cells from human embryos left over from IVF
2004: Britain opens the worlds rst government-nanced stem cell bank, containing embryonic and stem cell lines
K Hardy
1981: Scientists successfully culture (grow) pluripotent mouse embryonic stem cells
1990: Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act passed in the UK, includes founding of Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, which regulates the creation, use and storage of human embryos in treatment and research
2001: UK Parliament rules embryonic stem cell research can occur using government funding. Human embryos can be created for research purposes only, but not kept beyond 14 days
2006: Korean scientist Woo-suk Hwang found to have fraudulently claimed the creation of human embryonic cells through cloning
Admixed embryos
Another way to avoid using human embryonic stem cells could be to create hybrid embryos, by removing the nucleus from an animals egg and replacing it with a human body cell nucleus. The egg is not fertilised, but is triggered to develop with a jolt of electricity. If it works this could lead to early embryonic cell division, and production of human stem cells. However, the absence of the regulatory chemicals present in a human egg makes such work tricky to accomplish. Since 2008, three research groups in the UK have been granted licences by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) to create cytoplasmic hybrid embryos for research. Human admixed embryos are not allowed to develop beyond 14 days, it is prohibited to implant them into humans or animals, and their use is regulated by the HFEA.
PLURIU
PUTTING THE 'I' INTO IPS CELLS!
Transplants from donors are a thing of the past, thanks to Pluri-U. Simply attend your local clinic and have a small skin sample taken. Then, technicians will treat your cells with the right combination of chemicals and produce whichever cells you need for your condition, tailor-made to match your own immune system. No rejection! No immune-suppressing drugs! But dont take our word for it!
Marion, 41, says: A lifetime of type 1 diabetes, and my disease was gone after one procedure. No more insulin, no more monitoring my blood sugar! My only regret is that this wasnt available 20 years ago! Mark, 35, says: Our son was born with sickle-cell anaemia, but thanks to Pluri-Us cell reset and gene therapy package, his blood cells are now normal and hes disease-free!
Im really excited about being able to use hybrid embryos. Working with stem cells created this way will help me to research genetic neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons.
It seems unnatural to be mixing up animal and human cells. How do we know the long-term effects of this?
Question: Is creating a human admixed embryo from a mature human cell and an animal egg cell for research more acceptable ethically than using a human embryonic stem cell?
Question: What about using stem cells to enhance humans do you think it would be acceptable to use the same technology to make you stronger or able to run faster?
2006: Dr Shinya Yamanaka (below) and Dr Kazutoshi Takahashi create and name the rst induced pluripotent stem cells by treating mouse skin cells so they become like embryonic stem cells
Rubenstein/ickr
2008: The second UK Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act passed, amending the 1990 Act, allowing researchers, under tight controls, to create animalhuman hybrid embryos by replacing the nucleus from an animal egg with a nucleus from a human body cell
Domiwo/stock.xchng
2009: An international team of researchers creates the rst human induced pluripotent stem cells without using viruses
Maurizio De Angelis
See www. wellcome.ac.uk/ bigpicture/cell for a lesson plan to use with these articles.
2007: A Japanese team including Yamanaka and Takahashi and a separate US team create the rst induced pluripotent stem cells from human cells
2008: Scientists at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute create stem cells for ten genetic disorders, which will allow researchers to understand better how diseases develop in cultured cells
2010: In the USA, a patient with spinal cord damage becomes the rst person in the world to be injected with embryonic stem cells in the rst ofcial clinical trial of this therapy, in humans, which will test if its safe and if it works
JANUARY 2011 13
Big Picture
Real voices
Spike Walker
Micrographer (takes photos through microscopes)
Three people talk to us about the role of cells in their lives. Meet Spike Walker, an award-winning micrographer, Olly Rox, who was diagnosed with a rare form of leukaemia in his early 20s, and Andrew Evered, whose job as a cytologist means he screens cell samples for cancer.
Olly Rox
Nick David
When did you rst get into microscopy? When I was 11, a friend of mine told me there was a microscope at his school. So I asked my father for one. He was on about 2.50 a week but he bought me one for 4.50. And its been an interest for 65 years now. What has kept your interest so long? Its an entirely different world. And its accessible. People will spend a lot of money going out to Kenya to see lions in the wild. I can go up the lane, and take a tubeful of dirty water out of one of the ditches and Ive no idea what Im going to see, out of possibly 30 000 species. A lot of them are single cells, and theyre absolutely fascinating. The average cell in your body does one thing. If its a muscle cell it spends its time contracting, for example. These cells living on their own in water, and do everything: they propel themselves about, catch their prey, digest it and excrete the remains, and nd a mate. Which cell do you nd particularly fascinating? Theres a one-celled animal called a perenema. Its a very elastic, transparent sack with a stout whip sticking out the front end of it, which propels it around. The very tip of it wiggles like a nose. Sometimes Im looking at something else in a drop of water, and suddenly one of these twitchy little ngers appears in the corner of your eye, followed by yards of
nothing and then, unbelievably, this sack-like body. There are times Ive nearly fallen off my chair laughing. Whats tricky about making images with a microscope? If youre making a portrait of someone, you can decide exactly where your subject is going to sit. And other people hopefully dont come rushing in and out and getting involved in the photography. But if youre photographing things in dirty water, other things will be there and theyll swim in and out. Or the dancer youre photographing wont keep still and keeps moving out of the frame. Whats your favourite image? Theres one of oxidised vitamin C that got a Wellcome Special Award of Excellence in 2008. I made it by scratching boxes on the slide with a needle. The crystals grew in the boxes, and the image looks like a Victorian wall decoration little boxes with shells inside. What awards have you won? Ive won 19 Wellcome Image Awards since I started entering in 2002. This year I won the Royal Photographic Societys Combined Royal Colleges Medal probably for being the oldest micrographer still in existence! For a video on Spike and his work, see www.youtube.com/ watch?v=Xo7mr90GYLA
What do you do? Im 25, I used to be an engineer at the port of Felixstowe, but I left work last year to concentrate on rebuilding my boat. I bought it as an inspiration to get me through the bone marrow transplant I had for leukaemia ve years ago. What are your plans next? Next year Im sailing around Britain to raise money for the Anthony Nolan charity. They run the UKs largest stem cell register. They found me my donor and saved my life. I also want to show other young people with cancer that if youve got a focus or a goal, you can live longer, or you can beat it. How did you nd out you had leukaemia? I was rst diagnosed in 2005 with glandular fever because I started to get very tired. Then a routine blood test showed that I had leukaemia. The doctors told me I was only the third person in the world to be diagnosed with this type of leukaemia and the other two were dead. So I needed a bone marrow transplant urgently. Anthony Nolan scanned the register and found me one with a really good tissue match. How did they give you the transplant? I had to have another lot of chemotherapy and total-body radiation the harshest form they
ever give to anyone to destroy my own bone marrow. Then they gave me the new bone marrow. It just dripped in from a bag like a blood transfusion, through a tube that went directly through my chest muscle and ribs into my heart. It took about two hours for the bone marrow to drip in. As I watched it dripping in, I was thinking, whose blood is that? Who is this one person in the world whos saving my life? How did you understand the stem cell therapy? I saw it in an engineering way, as giving me an oil change: getting rid of my bone marrow and putting fresh in. Did the doctors tell you what your prognosis was? Yes, the survival rates of the transplant then werent fantastic, 10 to 15 per cent. It was quite scary your whole life is put into a gure. Now, Im in remission, and if I get the all-clear next March, that will be ve years post-transplant. Did you meet your donor? Yes, earlier this year. I met him and was able to thank him, as I wouldnt be here without him. Find out more at www.oliverstravels.co.uk. If you want to become a bone marrow donor, join the Anthony Nolan register visit www.anthonynolan.org.
Get online for even more cell-related material from the Big Picture team.
Go to www.wellcome.ac.uk/bigpicture/cell to nd more articles, videos, image galleries and lesson plans around the cell. This issues resources include: an animation and lesson plan on hearing a guide to the evolution of cells the story of Henrietta Lacks and HeLa cells a video on working with cells in the lab image galleries on cell division, cell types and the history of cell imaging.
Andrew Evered
Cytologist (screens cells for cancer)
Free science videos and lms The Wellcome Trust, the charity behind Big Picture, has a YouTube channel packed with videos on the research it supports. Free to use and share, the videos cover many different areas of biomedical science, from appetite to MRI, Parkinsons disease to chronic pain. Many include interviews with people researching and living with these issues. www.youtube.com/wellcometrust The Wellcome Film YouTube channel is home to hours of archived medical lm, free to use. Browse the channel for all kinds of lms, from brain surgery to UK public information lms on smoking. www.youtube.com/wellcomelm Free science images Wellcome Images is one of the worlds richest image collections, with themes ranging from medical and social history to contemporary healthcare. It includes over 40 000 biomedical images from the UKs leading teaching hospitals and research institutes. Images are free to browse and use for educational purposes. images.wellcome.ac.uk About the cover The cover image is Blood ( David S Goodsell, 2000) by David Goodsell, an Associate Professor at the Scripps Research Institute, USA. This illustration shows a cross-section through the blood, with blood serum in the upper half and a red blood cell below. There are Y-shaped antibodies, long, thin brinogen molecules (in light red) and many small albumin proteins in the serum. The large UFO-shaped object is a low-density lipoprotein and the six-armed protein is complement C1. The cell wall, in purple, is braced on the inner surface by long spectrin chains connected at one end to a small segment of actin lament. mgl.scripps.edu/people/goodsell/illustration/public
What do you do? If you go into my cytology lab youll see lots of people looking down microscopes. They dont look very busy, theyre not moving around, but their brains are working overtime. Theyre looking at human cells on glass slides that have been stained with dyes so we can see them better. What cells do you look at? Some 90 per cent of the screens we do are cervical, for the UKs Cervical Screening Programme. We decide if they are normal and healthy, or pre-cancerous. The other 10 per cent are nongynaecological screens of cells in body uids: sputum, urine and chest drains and so on. Were looking for signs of other cancers, such as lung or bladder cancer. How can you spot a precancerous cell? Through changes to the nucleus. In pre-cancerous cells or cancers theyre all on a spectrum the nucleus loses its roundness, becomes irregular in shape and gets larger. It also increases its uptake of the stains and dyes we use to see it, so it looks darker. Its more complex than that but thats it in a nutshell. Do you nd other things? We nd a lot of infections that werent clinically suspected. The cervix is very prone to the fungal infection thrush, for example. And two common viral infections we nd are the human papilloma virus (HPV) and the herpes virus. Theyre too small to see but they have an effect on the cells. HPV
takes over a cells machinery, and uses it to make its own new DNA. You can see that in the size and shape changes in the nucleus. How do you become a cytologist? I did a degree in biomedical science and gradually moved up through the ranks to become a consultant. Cytology isnt the easiest of healthcare disciplines to learn. You have to develop the visual skills to recognise cancer, and that takes a lot of practice. So theres a two-year training programme. You have to work in a cytology lab and screen a minimum of 5000 cervical smears, then pass a rigorous exam. After that youre certied to sign out cervical specimens. It takes several more years of practice to become procient at reporting non-cervical specimens. You can also enter the profession with four GSCEs. You do the same two years training, screen 5000 samples and take the exam. But that can limit your career as you can only screen cervical samples. What qualities do you need? Your eyesight must be good or possible to correct with spectacles, and you must have passed a recent standard eye test. You also need to be able to sit still and concentrate for long periods. Its meticulous work. And you must be able to make sound judgements about whether a sample is abnormal. Has the technology changed? Unlike other areas of biomedicine, such as haematology and biochemistry, cytology hasnt been automated. Theres no machine that can adequately take the place of the human eye.
Education editor: Stephanie Sinclair Editor: Chrissie Giles Writers: Jon Turney, Chrissie Giles, Penny Bailey Graphic designer: Malcolm Chivers Illustrator: Glen McBeth Project manager: Ruth Paget Assistant editor: Tom Freeman Teachers advisory board: Peter Anderson, Paul Connell, Alison Davies, Helen English, Ian Graham, Stephen Ham, Kim Hateld, Jaswinder Kaur, Marjorie Smith Advisory board: Frances Balkwill, Ilan Davies, Nan Davies, Andrew Greeneld, Margarete Heck, Anthony Hollander, Jane Itzhaki, Ross MacFarlane, Tim Mohun, Giles Newton, Laura Pastorelli, Emlyn Samuel, Fiona Watt, Stephen Wilkinson, Cathryn Wood, Emily Yeomans. Wellcome Trust: We are a global charitable foundation dedicated to achieving extraordinary improvements in human and animal health. We support the brightest minds in biomedical research and the medical humanities. Our breadth of support includes public engagement, education and the application of research to improve health. We are independent of both political and commercial interests.
The future of science depends on the quality of science education today.
All images, unless otherwise indicated, are from Wellcome Images (images.wellcome.ac.uk). Big Picture is the Wellcome Trust 2011 and is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 UK. ISSN 1745-7777. This is an open access publication and, with the exception of images and illustrations, the content may unless otherwise stated be reproduced free of charge in any format or medium, subject to the following conditions: content must be reproduced accurately;content must not be used in a misleading context; theWellcome Trust must be attributed as the original author and the title of the document specied in the attribution. The Wellcome Trust is a charity registered in England and Wales, no. 210183. Its sole trustee is The Wellcome Trust Limited, a company registered in England and Wales, no. 2711000 (whose registered ofce is at 215 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE, UK).
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Big Picture
Big Picture
THE CELL
and communicate? What are stem cells and why are they important? What happens when cells die?
We all share something amazing in common that we developed from a single sperm and egg to become complicated, sophisticated organisms made of trillions of cells. But how can cells grow and develop to form such complex creatures? In this issue of Big Picture, we explore the secrets of the cell looking at both what scientists understand so far, as well as whats still to be uncovered in this area. Join us as we take a close-up look at animal cells and get to grips with how these cells develop, grow and specialise to produce a vast array of tissues and organs with distinct structures and roles. Explore how cells communicate with each other and their surroundings to keep everything in working order, and what happens when these processes goes wrong. Find out what happens when cells die, and when they become immortal. Finally, we ask if stem cells might really hold the secret to treating and curing many diseases, and if so at what cost?
Big Pictur e
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