Lawrence HJ et al. (DEC 2005)
Blood 106 12 3988--94
Loss of expression of the Hoxa-9 homeobox gene impairs the proliferation and repopulating ability of hematopoietic stem cells.
The homeobox gene Hoxa-9 is normally expressed in primitive bone marrow cells,and overexpression of Hoxa-9 markedly expands hematopoietic stem cells,suggesting a function in early hematopoiesis. We present evidence for major functional defects in Hoxa-9-/- hematopoietic stem cells. Hoxa-9-/- marrow cells have normal numbers of immunophenotypic stem cells (Lin(-)c-kit(+)flk-2(-)Sca-1+ [KLFS] cells). However,sublethally irradiated Hoxa-9-/- mice develop persistent pancytopenia,indicating unusual sensitivity to ionizing irradiation. In competitive transplantation assays,Hoxa-9-/- cells showed an 8-fold reduction in multilineage long-term repopulating ability,a defect not seen in marrow cells deficient for the adjacent Hoxa-10 gene. Single-cell cultures of KLFS cells showed a 4-fold reduction in large high-proliferation potential colonies. In liquid cultures,Hoxa-9-deficient Lin(-)Sca-1(+) cells showed slowed proliferation (a 5-fold reduction in cell numbers at day 8) and delayed emergence of committed progenitors (a 5-fold decrease in colony-forming cells). Slowing of proliferation was accompanied by a delay in myeloid maturation,with a decrease in Gr-1hiMac-1hi cells at the end of the culture. Retroviral transduction with a Hoxa-9 expression vector dramatically enhanced the cytokine-driven proliferation and in vivo engraftment of Hoxa-9-/- marrow cells. Hoxa-9 appears to be specifically required for normal hematopoietic stem cell function both in vitro and in vivo.
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Gene expression profiling and localization of Hoechst-effluxing CD45- and CD45+ cells in the embryonic mouse lung.
Hoechst-effluxing cells (side population cells) are a rare subset of cells found in adult tissues that are highly enriched for stem and progenitor cell activity. To identify potential stem and progenitor cells during lung development,we generated gene expression profiles for CD45- and CD45+ side population cells in the embryonic day 17.5 lung. We found that side population cells comprise 1% of total embryonic day 17.5 lung cells (55% CD45+,45% CD45-). Gene profiling data demonstrated an overrepresentation of endothelial genes within the CD45- side population. We used expression of several distinct genes to identify two types of CD45- side population cells: 1) von Willebrand factor+/smooth muscle actin+ cells that reside in the muscular layer of select large vessels and 2) von Willebrand factor+/intercellular adhesion molecule+ cells that reside within the endothelial layer of select small vessels. Gene profiling of the CD45+ side population indicated an overrepresentation of genes associated with myeloid cell differentiation. Consistent with this,culturing CD45+ side population cells was associated with induction of mature dendritic markers (CD86). The microarray results suggested that expression of myeloperoxidase and proteinase-3 might be used to identify CD45+ side population cells. By immunohistochemistry,we found that myeloperoxidase+/proteinase-3+ cells represent a small subset of total CD45+ cells in the embryonic day 17.5 lung and that they reside in the mesenchyme and perivascular regions. This is the first detailed information regarding the phenotype and localization of side population cells in a developing organ.
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Kitsos CM et al. (SEP 2005)
The Journal of biological chemistry 280 39 33101--8
Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IV regulates hematopoietic stem cell maintenance.
The hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gives rise to all mature,terminally differentiated cells of the blood. Here we show that calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IV (CaMKIV) is present in c-Kit+ ScaI+ Lin(-/low) hematopoietic progenitor cells (KLS cells) and that its absence results in hematopoietic failure,characterized by a diminished KLS cell population and by an inability of these cells to reconstitute blood cells upon serial transplantation. KLS cell failure in the absence of CaMKIV is correlated with increased apoptosis and proliferation of these cells in vivo and in vitro. In turn,these cell biological defects are correlated with decreases in CREB-serine 133 phosphorylation as well as in CREB-binding protein (CBP) and Bcl-2 levels. Re-expression of CaMKIV in Camk4-/- KLS cells results in the rescue of the proliferation defects in vitro as well as in the restoration of CBP and Bcl-2 to wild type levels. These studies show that CaMKIV is a regulator of HSC homeostasis and suggest that its effects may be in part mediated via regulation of CBP and Bcl-2.
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Delaney C et al. (OCT 2005)
Blood 106 8 2693--9
Dose-dependent effects of the Notch ligand Delta1 on ex vivo differentiation and in vivo marrow repopulating ability of cord blood cells.
Although significant advances have been made over the last decade with respect to our understanding of stem cell biology,progress has been limited in the development of successful techniques for clinically significant ex vivo expansion of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. We here describe the effect of Notch ligand density on induction of Notch signaling and subsequent cell fate of human CD34+CD38- cord blood progenitors. Lower densities of Delta1(ext-IgG) enhanced the generation of CD34+ cells as well as CD14+ and CD7+ cells,consistent with early myeloid and lymphoid differentiation,respectively. However,culture with increased amounts of Delta1(ext-IgG) induced apoptosis of CD34+ precursors resulting in decreased cell numbers,without affecting generation of CD7+ cells. RNA interference studies revealed that the promotion of lymphoid differentiation was primarily mediated by Delta1 activation of Notch1. Furthermore,enhanced generation of NOD/SCID repopulating cells was seen following culture with lower but not higher densities of ligand. These studies indicate critical,quantitative aspects of Notch signaling in affecting hematopoietic precursor cell-fate outcomes and suggest that density of Notch ligands in different organ systems may be an important determinant in regulating cell-fate outcomes. Moreover,these findings contribute to the development of methodology for manipulation of hematopoietic precursors for therapeutic purposes.
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Bacigalupo A et al. (JUL 2005)
Experimental hematology 33 7 819--27
T-cell suppression mediated by mesenchymal stem cells is deficient in patients with severe aplastic anemia.
OBJECTIVE: To compare the suppressive effect of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC),derived from normal individuals or severe aplastic anemia patients (SAA),on T-cell activation. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We studied bone marrow MSC from 19 healthy donors and 23 SAA patients in different phases of the disease: at diagnosis (n = 3),following immunosuppressive therapy (IS) (n = 16),or after a bone marrow transplant (BMT) (n = 4). MSC were tested for T-cell suppression in the following assays: mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR),phytohemaglutinin (PHA)-primed cultures,activation surface markers,gamma-IFN production,hematopoietic colony formation (CFC),production of cyclic ADP-ribose (cADPR). RESULTS: The abnormalities of SAA MSC included: 1) significantly lower suppression of T-cell proliferation induced by alloantigens (p = 0.009) or PHA (p = 0.006); 2) impaired capacity to suppress CD38 expression on PHA-primed T cells (p = 0.001); 3) impaired ability to suppress gamma-IFN production in PHA cultures,resulting in an 11-fold higher gamma-IFN concentration; 4) no preventive effect on T cell-mediated inhibition of CFC; and 5) significantly reduced (p = 0.009) production of cADPR,a universal calcium mobilizer. MSC-mediated suppression of PHA-induced T-cell proliferation was restored to control levels in 3 of 4 patients post-BMT. CONCLUSION: The ability of MSC to downregulate T-cell priming,proliferation,and cytokine release is deficient in patients with SAA,persists indefinitely after immunosuppressive therapy,but seems to be restored after BMT. Whether these abnormalities are relevant to the pathogenesis of aplastic anemia remains to be determined.
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Lee J-H et al. (JUL 2005)
Experimental cell research 307 1 174--82
Contribution of human bone marrow stem cells to individual skeletal myotubes followed by myogenic gene activation.
Much attention is focused on characterizing the contribution of bone marrow (BM)-derived cells to regenerating skeletal muscle,fuelled by hopes for stem cell-mediated therapy of muscle degenerative diseases. Though physical integration of BM stem cells has been well documented,little evidence of functional commitment to myotube phenotype has been reported. This is due to the innate difficulty in distinguishing gene products derived from donor versus host nuclei. Here,we demonstrate that BM-derived stem cells contribute via gene expression following incorporation to skeletal myotubes. By co-culturing human BM-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) with mouse skeletal myoblasts,physical incorporation was observed by genetic lineage tracing and species-specific immunofluorescence. We used a human-specific antibody against the intermediate filament protein nestin,a marker of regenerating skeletal muscle,to identify functional contribution of MSC to myotube formation. Although nestin expression was never detected in MSC,human-specific expression was detected in myotubes that also contained MSC-derived nuclei. This induction of gene expression following myotube integration suggests that bone marrow-derived stem cells can reprogram and functionally contribute to the muscle cell phenotype. We propose that this model of myogenic commitment may provide the means to further characterize functional reprogramming of MSC to skeletal muscle.
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Schreiber A et al. (JUL 2005)
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN 16 7 2216--24
Membrane proteinase 3 expression in patients with Wegener's granulomatosis and in human hematopoietic stem cell-derived neutrophils.
A large membrane proteinase 3 (mPR3)-positive neutrophil subset (mPR3high) is a risk for Wegener's granulomatosis (WG). The relationship between mPR3 expression and clinical manifestations was investigated in 81 WG patients and mPR3 expression was studied in CD34+ stem cell-derived human neutrophils. The mPR3high neutrophil percentage correlated with renal function,anemia,and albumin at the time of presentation. The mPR3high neutrophil percentage and renal failure severity correlated directly after 5 yr. For elucidating mechanisms that govern mPR3 expression,studies were conducted to determine whether the genetic information that governs mPR3 expression resides within the neutrophils,even without stimuli possibly related to disease. CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells were differentiated to neutrophils,and their mPR3 expression was determined. A two-step amplification/differentiation protocol was used to differentiate human CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells into neutrophils with G-CSF. The cells progressively expressed the neutrophil surface markers CD66b,CD35,and CD11b. The ferricytochrome C assay demonstrated a strong respiratory burst at day 14 in response to PMA but none at day 0. Intracellular PR3 was detectable from day 4 by Western blotting. An increasing percentage of a mPR3-positive neutrophil subset became detectable by flow cytometry,whereas a second subset remained negative,consistent with a bimodal expression. Finally,human PR3-anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic autoantibodies induced a stronger respiratory burst,compared with human control IgG in stem cell-derived neutrophils. Taken together,these studies underscore the clinical importance of the WG mPR3 phenotype. The surface mPR3 on resting cells is probably genetically determined rather than being dictated by external factors.
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Cheng L et al. (JUN 2014)
Cell Research 24 6 665--679
Generation of neural progenitor cells by chemical cocktails and hypoxia
Neural progenitor cells (NPCs) can be induced from somatic cells by defined factors. Here we report that NPCs can be generated from mouse embryonic fibroblasts by a chemical cocktail,namely VCR (V,VPA,an inhibitor of HDACs; C,CHIR99021,an inhibitor of GSK-3 kinases and R,Repsox,an inhibitor of TGF-β pathways),under a physiological hypoxic condition. These chemical-induced NPCs (ciNPCs) resemble mouse brain-derived NPCs re- garding their proliferative and self-renewing abilities,gene expression profiles,and multipotency for different neu- roectodermal lineages in vitro and in vivo. Further experiments reveal that alternative cocktails with inhibitors of histone deacetylation,glycogen synthase kinase,and TGF-β pathways show similar efficacies for ciNPC induction. Moreover,ciNPCs can also be induced from mouse tail-tip fibroblasts and human urinary cells with the same chemi- cal cocktail VCR. Thus our study demonstrates that lineage-specific conversion of somatic cells to NPCs could be achieved by chemical cocktails without introducing exogenous factors.
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Mä et al. (AUG 2005)
Blood 106 4 1215--22
Infection of human CD34+ progenitor cells with Bartonella henselae results in intraerythrocytic presence of B. henselae.
Although there is evidence that endothelial cells are important targets for human pathogenic Bartonella species,the primary niche of infection is unknown. Here we elucidated whether human CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) internalize B. henselae and may serve as a potential niche of the pathogen. We showed that B. henselae does not adhere to or invade human erythrocytes. In contrast,B. henselae invades and persists in HPCs as shown by gentamicin protection assays,confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM),and electron microscopy (EM). Fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis of glycophorin A expression revealed that erythroid differentiation of HPCs was unaffected following infection with B. henselae. The number of intracellular B. henselae continuously increased over a 13-day period. When HPCs were infected with B. henselae immediately after isolation,intracellular bacteria were subsequently detectable in differentiated erythroid cells on day 9 and day 13 after infection,as shown by CLSM,EM,and FACS analysis. Our data provide,for the first time,evidence that a bacterial pathogen is able to infect and persist in differentiating HPCs,and suggest that HPCs might serve as a potential primary niche in Bartonella infections.
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Cai S et al. (APR 2005)
Cancer research 65 8 3319--27
Mitochondrial targeting of human O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase protects against cell killing by chemotherapeutic alkylating agents.
DNA repair capacity of eukaryotic cells has been studied extensively in recent years. Mammalian cells have been engineered to overexpress recombinant nuclear DNA repair proteins from ectopic genes to assess the impact of increased DNA repair capacity on genome stability. This approach has been used in this study to specifically target O(6)-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) to the mitochondria and examine its impact on cell survival after exposure to DNA alkylating agents. Survival of human hematopoietic cell lines and primary hematopoietic CD34(+) committed progenitor cells was monitored because the baseline repair capacity for alkylation-induced DNA damage is typically low due to insufficient expression of MGMT. Increased DNA repair capacity was observed when K562 cells were transfected with nuclear-targeted MGMT (nucl-MGMT) or mitochondrial-targeted MGMT (mito-MGMT). Furthermore,overexpression of mito-MGMT provided greater resistance to cell killing by 1,3-bis (2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) than overexpression of nucl-MGMT. Simultaneous overexpression of mito-MGMT and nucl-MGMT did not enhance the resistance provided by mito-MGMT alone. Overexpression of either mito-MGMT or nucl-MGMT also conferred a similar level of resistance to methyl methanesulfonate (MMS) and temozolomide (TMZ) but simultaneous overexpression in both cellular compartments was neither additive nor synergistic. When human CD34(+) cells were infected with oncoretroviral vectors that targeted O(6)-benzylguanine (6BG)-resistant MGMT (MGMT(P140K)) to the nucleus or the mitochondria,committed progenitors derived from infected cells were resistant to 6BG/BCNU or 6BG/TMZ. These studies indicate that mitochondrial or nuclear targeting of MGMT protects hematopoietic cells against cell killing by BCNU,TMZ,and MMS,which is consistent with the possibility that mitochondrial DNA damage and nuclear DNA damage contribute equally to alkylating agent-induced cell killing during chemotherapy.
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Liang Y et al. (AUG 2005)
Blood 106 4 1479--87
Effects of aging on the homing and engraftment of murine hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells.
To test the hypothesis that aging has negative effects on stem-cell homing and engraftment,young or old C57BL/6 bone marrow (BM) cells were injected,using a limiting-dilution,competitive transplantation method,into old or young Ly5 congenic mice. Numbers of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and progenitor cells (HPCs) recovered from BM or spleen were measured and compared with the numbers initially transplanted. Although the frequency of marrow competitive repopulation units (CRUs) increased approximately 2-fold from 2 months to 2 years of age,the BM homing efficiency of old CRUs was approximately 3-fold lower than that of young CRUs. Surprisingly,the overall size of individual stem-cell clones generated in recipients receiving a single CRU was not affected by donor age. However,the increased ages of HSC donors and HSC transplant recipients caused marked skewing of the pattern of engraftment toward the myeloid lineage,indicating that HSC-intrinsic and HSC-extrinsic (microenvironmental) age-related changes favor myelopoiesis. This correlated with changes after transplantation in the rate of recovery of circulating leukocytes,erythrocytes,and platelets. Recovery of the latter was especially blunted in aged recipients. Collectively,these findings may have implications for clinical HSC transplantation in which older persons increasingly serve as donors for elderly patients.
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Storms RW et al. (JUL 2005)
Blood 106 1 95--102
Distinct hematopoietic progenitor compartments are delineated by the expression of aldehyde dehydrogenase and CD34.
A broad range of hematopoietic stem cells and progenitors reside within a fraction of umbilical cord blood (UCB) that exhibits low light scatter properties (SSC(lo)) and high expression of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH(br)). Many SSC(lo) ALDH(br) cells coexpress CD34; however,other cells express either ALDH or CD34. To investigate the developmental potential of these cell subsets,purified ALDH(br) CD34+,ALDH(neg) CD34+,and ALDH(br) CD34(neg) UCB cells were characterized within a variety of in vivo and in vitro assays. Primitive progenitors capable of multilineage development were monitored in long- and short-term repopulation assays performed on nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID) mice,and in primary and secondary long-term culture assays. These progenitors were highly enriched within the ALDH(br) CD34+ fraction. This cell fraction also enriched short-term myeloid progenitors that were detected in vitro. By comparison,ALDH(neg) CD34+ cells contained few primitive progenitors and had diminished short-term myeloid potential but exhibited enhanced short-term natural killer (NK) cell development in vitro. The ALDH(br) CD34(neg) cells were not efficiently supported by any of the assays used. These studies suggested that in particular the expression of ALDH delineated distinct CD34+ stem cell and progenitor compartments. The differential expression of ALDH may provide a means to explore normal and malignant processes associated with myeloid and lymphoid development.
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