“It is extremely difficult to track individual changes in this chaos,” said Katie Cockburn, a postdoctoral researcher in the lab of Valentina Greco, the Carolyn Walch Slayman Professor of Genetics. Cockburn, former graduate student Kai Mesa, Greco, and two colleagues at Harvard Medical School — Allon Klein and Kyogo Kawaguchi — found a way to do that. Using new imaging technology and powerful analyses, they discovered that changes in neighboring cells — either by death or differentiation — triggered stem cells to renew. “It is what happens in the neighborhood that triggers the renewal of stem cells, not renewing stem cells that change the neighborhood,” Cockburn said. The work was published in the journal Cell Stem Cell. Reference: “Homeostatic Epidermal Stem Cell Self-Renewal Is Driven by Local Differentiation” by Kailin R. Mesa, Kyogo Kawaguchi, Katie Cockburn, David Gonzalez, Jonathan Boucher, Tianchi Xin, Allon M. Klein and Valentina Greco, 27 September 2018, Cell Stem Cell.DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2018.09.005