The studies, which are published in Nature Genetics, show amongst other things, that hair follicle stem cells can divide actively and transport themselves through the skin tissue.
"The stem cells don't behave at all in the way we'd previously thought, and are found in unexpected places", says Professor Rune Toftg?, one of the scientists at Karolinska Institutet responsible for the study. "We're now investigating the part played by the stem cells in the wound-healing process and the development of basal cell carcinoma, the most common form of skin cancer."
The stem cells examined by the present study are found in the skin's hair follicles, around which the cells are able to move depending on their stage of growth. The scientists believe that their growth is governed by previously known mechanism called Hedgehog signalling. Mutations in the genes that control this signal system can cause the delayed deactivation of signal transference; the signals thus continue uninhibited, which increases the risk of cancer.































Recent comments
10 hours 5 min ago
10 hours 47 min ago
11 hours 20 min ago
11 hours 26 min ago
12 hours 18 min ago
12 hours 41 min ago
11 hours 23 min ago
1 day 1 hour ago
1 day 3 hours ago
1 day 6 hours ago