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Aging Blood Stem Cells and the Roots of Cancer

Aging Blood Stem Cells and the Roots of Cancer

Sanford Stem Cell Institute Symposium 2025

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego

March 6, 202610m 20s

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Show Notes

Aging is the leading risk factor for cancer, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, and heart disease, and Robert A.J. Signer, Ph.D., studies how aging stem cells shape pre-cancer and healthspan. As deputy director of the Sanford Stem Cell Discovery Center, Signer focuses on rare blood-forming stem cells that self-renew, generate all blood and immune cells, and normally sustain more than 35 trillion blood cells, including about 2 million new red blood cells every second. His group finds that these “Zen” stem cells slow protein production to limit damaging “trash,” but aging stresses overwhelm these defenses. Stress response programs such as HSF1 then help both healthy and mutant stem cells, fueling clonal hematopoiesis, a common, untreated pre-cancerous condition linked to cardiovascular disease, inflammation, cancer, and increased mortality. Series: "Stem Cell Channel" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 41253]

Topics

aging blood stem cellspre cancer riskRobert A.J. Signer PhDUC San Diego stem cell researchclonal hematopoiesispre cancerous blood conditionheart disease riskinflammation and agingcancer risk in older adultsstem cell stress responsesH