Litcius/Paper detail

To Be or Not to Be a Germ Cell: The Extragonadal Germ Cell Tumor Paradigm

Massimo De Felici, Francesca Gioia Klinger, Federica Campolo, Carmela Rita Balistreri, Marco Barchi, Susanna Dolci

2021International Journal of Molecular Sciences53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the human embryo, the genetic program that orchestrates germ cell specification involves the activation of epigenetic and transcriptional mechanisms that make the germline a unique cell population continuously poised between germness and pluripotency. Germ cell tumors, neoplasias originating from fetal or neonatal germ cells, maintain such dichotomy and can adopt either pluripotent features (embryonal carcinomas) or germness features (seminomas) with a wide range of phenotypes in between these histotypes. Here, we review the basic concepts of cell specification, migration and gonadal colonization of human primordial germ cells (hPGCs) highlighting the analogies of transcriptional/epigenetic programs between these two cell types.

Topics & Concepts

Germ cellBiologyGermlineEpigeneticsGerm cell tumorsInduced pluripotent stem cellGerm line developmentEmbryonic stem cellPopulationGermCell biologyPhenotypeEmbryoGeneticsCellGeneMedicineChemotherapyEnvironmental healthPluripotent Stem Cells ResearchRenal and related cancersEpigenetics and DNA Methylation