Please circulate this announcement in your lab

February 15th 2019, 14h30-16h00
Salle de Rhumatologie, Hôpital Pellegrin, 12th floor

Lucie Laplane (CNRS, IHPST & Institut Gustave Roussy)

"What is stemness and how does that matter?"

A PhilInBioMed seminar

Open to all
 
 
Lucie Laplane is a CNRS researcher at UMR8590 (IHPST), Université Paris 
I-Panthéon-Sorbonne & UMR1170, Institut de Cancérologie Gustave Roussy. She is 
the author of the book Cancer Stem Cells, Philosophy and Therapies, which 
leading stem cell researcher Professor Hans Clevers commeted on in Nature: 
“(The book) builds a much broader framework for understanding the biology of 
stem cells of all types… Laplane’s rigorous analyses unveil deep semantic and 
conceptual problems in the field… Laplane’s stemness framework should be of 
great value… A philosopher may indeed have straightened out the stem-cell 
field.”
Abstract of the talk

What is a stem cell? This is both a biological and a philosophical issue. As a 
philosopher, my aim is to describe the kind of property (or set of properties) 
that stemness is. On the basis of scientific literature analysis, interviews of 
stem cell and cancer stem cell specialists, and my own experience of wet lab 
experiments, I will address four successive questions:
 (1) What kind of property is stemness? I will show that stemness can be four 
kinds of properties: categorical (stemness is an intrinsic property of stem 
cells), dispositional (stemness is an intrinsic property whose expression 
relies on extrinsic stimuli), relational (stemness is an extrinsic property 
induced by the microenvironment), or systemic (stemness is an extrinsic 
property that is maintained and controlled at the cell population level). 
Stemness is different in different types of stem cells (e.g. stemness is a 
dispositional property for the hematopoietic stem cells and a relational 
property for the germ line stem cells).
 (2) Does it matter? I will show that clarifying the nature of stemness for 
each kind of stem cell is of major importance at least for oncology, as the 
efficiency of some therapeutic strategies (cancer stem cell-targeting 
therapies, niche-targeting therapies) directly relies on whether stemness is a 
categorical, a dispositional, a relational, or a systemic property (Laplane HUP 
2016, reviewed in Clevers Nature 2016). In addition, the different types of 
stemness have specific consequences for evolutionary processes in somatic cells 
(Laplane Biology & Philosophy 2018).
 (3) Is stemness stable? I will explore malignant hemopathies and show that 
some data suggest while stemness is a dispositional property in the normal 
hematopoietic system, it might switch to a categorical, relational, or systemic 
property, depending on genetic and epigenetic alterations (Laplane & Solary  
M/S 2017).
 (4) Is stem cell a unified biological category? If stem cells fall under four 
distinct categories then are we giving the same name to unrelated cell types? I 
will suggest that crossing phylogeny and philosophy of stem cells might shed 
light on the natural boundaries of the concept of stem cell.
Further information on the seminar here.


--
Dr. Wiebke Bretting
Project Manager ERC IDEM
ImmunoConcEpT, UMR5164
Université de Bordeaux
146 rue Léo Saignat
33076 Bordeaux
https://www.immuconcept.org/erc-idem/

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