Stem cells are self-renewing multipotent progenitors with the broadest developmental potential in a given tissue at a given
time. Normal stem cells in the adult organism are responsible for renewal and repair of aged or damaged tissue. Adult stem
cells are present in virtually all tissues and during most stages of development. In this review, we introduce the reader
to the basic information about the field. We describe selected stem cell isolation techniques and stem cell markers for various
stem cell populations. These include makers for endothelial progenitor cells (CD146/MCAM/MUC18/S-endo-1, CD34, CD133/prominin,
Tie-2, Flk1/KD/VEGFR2), hematopoietic stem cells (CD34, CD117/c-Kit, Sca1), mesenchymal stem cells (CD146/MCAM/MUC18/S-endo-1,
STRO-1, Thy-1), neural stem cells (CD133/prominin, nestin, NCAM), mammary stem cells (CD24, CD29, Sca1), and intestinal stem
cells (NCAM, CD34, Thy-1, CD117/c-Kit, Flt-3). Separate section provides a concise summary of recent clinical trials involving
stem cells directed towards improvement of a damaged myocardium. In the last part of the review, we reflect on the field and
on future developments.
Keywords Autoimmune disease - G-CSF - Graft vs. host reaction - Stem/progenitor cell - Trans-differentiation
Sabine Hombach-Klonisch, Soumya Panigrahi, and Iran Rashedi contributed equally to this review manuscript.
Klaus Schulze-Osthoff and Marek Los share senior authorship.