“…Nestin is a member of the class VI family of intermediate filament proteins originally identified in neural progenitor/stem cells of the developing central nervous system (Dahlstrand, Zimmerman, McKay, & Lendahl, ; Lendahl, Zimmerman, & McKay, ). However, additional studies revealed that nestin was not a unique marker of neural progenitor/stem cells as the intermediate filament protein was detected in fibroblasts (e.g., heart, kidney), vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells, pre‐existing cardiomyocytes bordering the peri‐infarct region of the ischemically damaged human/rodent heart, skeletal muscle, and tumorigenic cells (Béguin, Gosselin, Mamarbachi, & Calderone, ; Carlsson, Li, Paulin, & Thornell, ; Chen et al, ; El‐Helou et al, ; Hertig et al, ; Ishiwata et al, ; Meus, Hertig, Villeneuve, Jasmin, & Calderone, Mokry et al, ; Oikawa, Hayashi, Maesawa, Masuda, & Sobue, ; Sejersen & Lendahl, ; Tardif et al, ; Tomioka et al, ; Vaittinen et al, ). Biologically, nestin plays a direct role in the proliferation and migration of normal and tumorigenic cells (Béguin et al, ; Chen et al, ; Liang et al, ; Ishiwata, Matsuda, & Naito, ; Matsuda et al, ; Meus et al, ; Tardif et al, ; Xue & Yuan, ).…”