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      The art of cellular communication: tunneling nanotubes bridge the divide

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          Abstract

          The ability of cells to receive, process, and respond to information is essential for a variety of biological processes. This is true for the simplest single cell entity as it is for the highly specialized cells of multicellular organisms. In the latter, most cells do not exist as independent units, but are organized into specialized tissues. Within these functional assemblies, cells communicate with each other in different ways to coordinate physiological processes. Recently, a new type of cell-to-cell communication was discovered, based on de novo formation of membranous nanotubes between cells. These F-actin-rich structures, referred to as tunneling nanotubes (TNT), were shown to mediate membrane continuity between connected cells and facilitate the intercellular transport of various cellular components. The subsequent identification of TNT-like structures in numerous cell types revealed some structural diversity. At the same time it emerged that the direct transfer of cargo between cells is a common functional property, suggesting a general role of TNT-like structures in selective, long-range cell-to-cell communication. Due to the growing number of documented thin and long cell protrusions in tissue implicated in cell-to-cell signaling, it is intriguing to speculate that TNT-like structures also exist in vivo and participate in important physiological processes.

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          Mitochondrial transfer between cells can rescue aerobic respiration.

          Current theory indicates that mitochondria were obtained 1.5 billion years ago from an ancient prokaryote. The mitochondria provided the capacity for aerobic respiration, the creation of the eukaryotic cell, and eventually complex multicellular organisms. Recent reports have found that mitochondria play essential roles in aging and determining lifespan. A variety of heritable and acquired diseases are linked to mitochondrial dysfunction. We report here that mitochondria are more dynamic than previously considered: mitochondria or mtDNA can move between cells. The active transfer from adult stem cells and somatic cells can rescue aerobic respiration in mammalian cells with nonfunctional mitochondria.
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            Lymphocyte responses and cytokines.

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              Opinion: the origin of the cancer stem cell: current controversies and new insights.

              Most tumours are derived from a single cell that is transformed into a cancer-initiating cell (cancer stem cell) that has the capacity to proliferate and form tumours in vivo. However, the origin of the cancer stem cell remains elusive. Interestingly, during development and tissue repair the fusion of genetic and cytoplasmic material between cells of different origins is an important physiological process. Such cell fusion and horizontal gene-transfer events have also been linked to several fundamental features of cancer and could be important in the development of the cancer stem cell.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +47-555-86849 , +47-555-86360 , hans-hermann.gerdes@biomed.uib.no
                Journal
                Histochem Cell Biol
                Histochemistry and Cell Biology
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0948-6143
                1432-119X
                2 April 2008
                May 2008
                : 129
                : 5
                : 539-550
                Affiliations
                Department of Biomedicine, University of Bergen, Jonas Lies vei 91, 5009 Bergen, Norway
                Article
                412
                10.1007/s00418-008-0412-0
                2323029
                18386044
                51fa5db4-f31f-4a7e-bc63-ea8f49936647
                © Springer-Verlag 2008
                History
                : 5 March 2008
                Categories
                Review
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag 2008

                Cell biology
                intercellular transfer,cytoneme,viral transmission,tunneling nanotube,tnt
                Cell biology
                intercellular transfer, cytoneme, viral transmission, tunneling nanotube, tnt

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