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Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 2008 Jan;9(1):82-8.
; n9 a: M2 x9 l9 ]9 @Epidermal homeostasis: do committed progenitors work while stem cells sleep?2 [# Z' w1 q$ i
Jones P, Simons BD.7 |( L% @. v& S
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Philip Jones is at the MRC Cancer Cell Unit, Hutchison/MRC Research Centre, Cambridge, CB2 2XZ, UK. phj20@hutchison-mrc.cam.ac.uk
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Tracking the fate of cells in murine epidermis in vivo has revealed that a committed progenitor cell population can maintain normal adult tissue in the long term without support from a long-lived, self-renewing population of stem cells. Here, we argue that these results challenge the dogma that stem-cell proliferation is required for the cellular homeostasis of the epidermis and other adult tissues, with important implications for tissue physiology and disease.
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/ o7 @4 S7 `( @" U- o) ihttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=Epidermal%20homeostasis%3A%20do%20committed%20progenitors%20work%20while%20stem%20cells%20sleep%3F%20 |
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