This paper develops a point-mutation model describing the evolutionary
dynamics of a population of adult stem cells. Such a model may prove useful for
quantitative studies of tissue aging and the emergence of cancer. We consider
two modes of chromosome segregation: (1) Random segregation, where the daughter
chromosomes of a given parent chromosome segregate randomly into the stem cell
and its differentiating sister cell. (2) ``Immortal DNA strand''
co-segregation, for which the stem cell retains the daughter chromosomes with
the oldest parent strands. Immortal strand co-segregation is a mechanism,
originally proposed by Cairns (J. Cairns, {\it Nature} {\bf 255}, 197 (1975)),
by which stem cells preserve the integrity of their genomes. For random
segregation, we develop an ordered strand pair formulation of the dynamics,
analogous to the ordered strand pair formalism developed for quasispecies
dynamics involving semiconservative replication with imperfect lesion repair
(in this context, lesion repair is taken to mean repair of postreplication
base-pair mismatches). Interestingly, a similar formulation is possible with
immortal strand co-segregation, despite the fact that this segregation
mechanism is age-dependent. From our model we are able to mathematically show
that, when lesion repair is imperfect, then immortal strand co-segregation
leads to better preservation of the stem cell lineage than random chromosome
segregation. Furthermore, our model allows us to estimate the optimal lesion
repair efficiency for preserving an adult stem cell population for a given
period of time. For human stem cells, we obtain that mispaired bases still
present after replication and cell division should be left untouched, to avoid
potentially fixing a mutation in both DNA strands.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure