Nishimura K et al. (FEB 2011)
The Journal of biological chemistry 286 6 4760--71
Development of defective and persistent Sendai virus vector: a unique gene delivery/expression system ideal for cell reprogramming.
The ectopic expression of transcription factors can reprogram differentiated tissue cells into induced pluripotent stem cells. However,this is a slow and inefficient process,depending on the simultaneous delivery of multiple genes encoding essential reprogramming factors and on their sustained expression in target cells. Moreover,once cell reprogramming is accomplished,these exogenous reprogramming factors should be replaced with their endogenous counterparts for establishing autoregulated pluripotency. Complete and designed removal of the exogenous genes from the reprogrammed cells would be an ideal option for satisfying this latter requisite as well as for minimizing the risk of malignant cell transformation. However,no single gene delivery/expression system has ever been equipped with these contradictory characteristics. Here we report the development of a novel replication-defective and persistent Sendai virus (SeVdp) vector based on a noncytopathic variant virus,which fulfills all of these requirements for cell reprogramming. The SeVdp vector could accommodate up to four exogenous genes,deliver them efficiently into various mammalian cells (including primary tissue cells and human hematopoietic stem cells) and express them stably in the cytoplasm at a prefixed balance. Furthermore,interfering with viral transcription/replication using siRNA could erase the genomic RNA of SeVdp vector from the target cells quickly and thoroughly. A SeVdp vector installed with Oct4/Sox2/Klf4/c-Myc could reprogram mouse primary fibroblasts quite efficiently; ∼1% of the cells were reprogrammed to Nanog-positive induced pluripotent stem cells without chromosomal gene integration. Thus,this SeVdp vector has potential as a tool for advanced cell reprogramming and for stem cell research.
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Xu S et al. (JAN 2010)
Journal of biomedicine & biotechnology 2010 105940
An improved harvest and in vitro expansion protocol for murine bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells.
Compared to bone marrow (BM) derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) from human origin or from other species,the in vitro expansion and purification of murine MSCs (mMSCs) is much more difficult because of the low MSC yield and the unwanted growth of non-MSCs in the in vitro expansion cultures. We describe a modified protocol to isolate and expand murine BM derived MSCs based on the combination of mechanical crushing and collagenase digestion at the moment of harvest,followed by an immunodepletion step using microbeads coated with CD11b,CD45 and CD34 antibodies. The number of isolated mMSCs as estimated by colony forming unit-fibroblast (CFU-F) assay showed that this modified isolation method could yield 70.0% more primary colonies. After immunodepletion,a homogenous mMSC population could already be obtained after two passages. Immunodepleted mMSCs (ID-mMSCs) are uniformly positive for stem cell antigen-1 (Sca-1),CD90,CD105 and CD73 cell surface markers,but negative for the hematopoietic surface markers CD14,CD34 and CD45. Moreover the immunodepleted cell population exhibits more differentiation potential into adipogenic,osteogenic and chondrogenic lineages. Our data illustrate the development of an efficient and reliable expansion protocol increasing the yield and purity of mMSCs and reducing the overall expansion time.
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Kim J-E et al. (FEB 2011)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108 7 3005--10
Investigating synapse formation and function using human pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons.
A major goal of stem-cell research is to identify conditions that reliably regulate their differentiation into specific cell types. This goal is particularly important for human stem cells if they are to be used for in vivo transplantation or as a platform for drug development. Here we describe the establishment of procedures to direct the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells and human induced pluripotent stem cells into forebrain neurons that are capable of forming synaptic connections. In addition,HEK293T cells expressing Neuroligin (NLGN) 3 and NLGN4,but not those containing autism-associated mutations,are able to induce presynaptic differentiation in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. We show that a mutant NLGN4 containing an in-frame deletion is unable to localize correctly to the cell surface when overexpressed and fails to enhance synapse formation in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. These findings establish human pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons as a viable model for the study of synaptic differentiation and function under normal and disorder-associated conditions.
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Quintarelli C et al. (MAR 2011)
Blood 117 12 3353--62
High-avidity cytotoxic T lymphocytes specific for a new PRAME-derived peptide can target leukemic and leukemic-precursor cells.
The cancer testis antigen (CTA) preferentially expressed antigen of melanoma (PRAME) is overexpressed by many hematologic malignancies,but is absent on normal tissues,including hematopoietic progenitor cells,and may therefore be an appropriate candidate for T cell-mediated immunotherapy. Because it is likely that an effective antitumor response will require high-avidity,PRAME-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs),we attempted to generate such CTLs using professional and artificial antigen-presenting cells loaded with a peptide library spanning the entire PRAME protein and consisting of 125 synthetic pentadecapeptides overlapping by 11 amino acids. We successfully generated polyclonal,PRAME-specific CTL lines and elicited high-avidity CTLs,with a high proportion of cells recognizing a previously uninvestigated HLA-A*02-restricted epitope,P435-9mer (NLTHVLYPV). These PRAME-CTLs could be generated both from normal donors and from subjects with PRAME(+) hematologic malignancies. The cytotoxic activity of our PRAME-specific CTLs was directed not only against leukemic blasts,but also against leukemic progenitor cells as assessed by colony-forming-inhibition assays,which have been implicated in leukemia relapse. These PRAME-directed CTLs did not affect normal hematopoietic progenitors,indicating that this approach may be of value for immunotherapy of PRAME(+) hematologic malignancies.
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Wu X et al. (APR 2011)
The Journal of biological chemistry 286 15 13512--21
p85alpha regulates osteoblast differentiation by cross-talking with the MAPK pathway.
Class IA phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) is involved in regulating many cellular functions including cell growth,proliferation,cell survival,and differentiation. The p85 regulatory subunit is a critical component of the PI3K signaling pathway. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are multipotent cells that can be differentiated into osteoblasts (OBs),adipocytes,and chondrocytes under defined culture conditions. To determine whether p85α subunit of PI3K affects biological functions of MSCs,bone marrow-derived wild type (WT) and p85α-deficient (p85α(-/-)) cells were employed in this study. Increased cell growth,higher proliferation rate and reduced number of senescent cells were observed in MSCs lacking p85α compare with WT MSCs as evaluated by CFU-F assay,thymidine incorporation assay,and β-galactosidase staining,respectively. These functional changes are associated with the increased cell cycle,increased expression of cyclin D,cyclin E,and reduced expression of p16 and p19 in p85α(-/-) MSCs. In addition,a time-dependent reduction in alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity and osteocalcin mRNA expression was observed in p85α(-/-) MSCs compared with WT MSCs,suggesting impaired osteoblast differentiation due to p85α deficiency in MSCs. The impaired p85α(-/-) osteoblast differentiation was associated with increased activation of Akt and MAPK. Importantly,bone morphogenic protein 2 (BMP2) was able to intensify the differentiation of osteoblasts derived from WT MSCs,whereas this process was significantly impaired as a result of p85α deficiency. Addition of LY294002,a PI3K inhibitor,did not alter the differentiation of osteoblasts in either genotype. However,application of PD98059,a Mek/MAPK inhibitor,significantly enhanced osteoblast differentiation in WT and p85α(-/-) MSCs. These results suggest that p85α plays an essential role in osteoblast differentiation from MSCs by repressing the activation of MAPK pathway.
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Kiris E et al. (MAY 2011)
Stem cell research 6 3 195--205
Embryonic stem cell-derived motoneurons provide a highly sensitive cell culture model for botulinum neurotoxin studies, with implications for high-throughput drug discovery.
Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) inhibit cholinergic synaptic transmission by specifically cleaving proteins that are crucial for neurotransmitter exocytosis. Due to the lethality of these toxins,there are elevated concerns regarding their possible use as bioterrorism agents. Moreover,their widespread use for cosmetic purposes,and as medical treatments,has increased the potential risk of accidental overdosing and environmental exposure. Hence,there is an urgent need to develop novel modalities to counter BoNT intoxication. Mammalian motoneurons are the main target of BoNTs; however,due to the difficulty and poor efficiency of the procedures required to isolate the cells,they are not suitable for high-throughput drug screening assays. Here,we explored the suitability of embryonic stem (ES) cell-derived motoneurons as a renewable,reproducible,and physiologically relevant system for BoNT studies. We found that the sensitivity of ES-derived motoneurons to BoNT/A intoxication is comparable to that of primary mouse spinal motoneurons. Additionally,we demonstrated that several BoNT/A inhibitors protected SNAP-25,the BoNT/A substrate,in the ES-derived motoneuron system. Furthermore,this system is compatible with immunofluorescence-based high-throughput studies. These data suggest that ES-derived motoneurons provide a highly sensitive system that is amenable to large-scale screenings to rapidly identify and evaluate the biological efficacies of novel therapeutics.
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Tenedini E et al. ( 2010)
Cell Death & Disease 1 e28
Integrated analysis of microRNA and mRNA expression profiles in physiological myelopoiesis: role of hsa-mir-299-5p in CD34+ progenitor cells commitment
Hematopoiesis entails a series of hierarchically organized events that proceed throughout cell specification and terminates with cell differentiation. Commitment needs the transcription factors' effort,which,in concert with microRNAs,drives cell fate and responds to promiscuous patterns of gene expression by turning on lineage-specific genes and repressing alternate lineage transcripts. We obtained microRNA profiles from human CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells and in vitro differentiated erythroblasts,megakaryoblasts,monoblasts and myeloblast precursors that we analyzed together with their gene expression profiles. The integrated analysis of microRNA-mRNA expression levels highlighted an inverse correlation between microRNAs specifically upregulated in one single-cell progeny and their putative target genes,which resulted in downregulation. Among the upregulated lineage-enriched microRNAs,hsa-miR-299-5p emerged as having a role in controlling CD34+ progenitor fate,grown in multilineage culture conditions. Gain- and loss-of-function experiments revealed that hsa-miR-299-5p participates in the regulation of hematopoietic progenitor fate,modulating megakaryocytic-granulocytic versus erythroid-monocytic differentiation.
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Bauwens CL et al. (AUG 2011)
Tissue engineering. Part A 17 15-16 1901--9
Geometric control of cardiomyogenic induction in human pluripotent stem cells.
Although it has been observed that aggregate size affects cardiac development,an incomplete understanding of the cellular mechanisms underlying human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyogenesis has limited the development of robust defined-condition cardiac cell generation protocols. Our objective was thus to elucidate cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the endogenous control of human embryonic stem cell (hESC) cardiac tissue development,and to test the hypothesis that hESC aggregate size influences extraembryonic endoderm (ExE) commitment and cardiac inductive properties. hESC aggregates were generated with 100,1000,or 4000 cells per aggregate using microwells. The frequency of endoderm marker (FoxA2 and GATA6)-expressing cells decreased with increasing aggregate size during early differentiation. Cardiogenesis was maximized in aggregates initiated from 1000 cells,with frequencies of 0.49±0.06 cells exhibiting a cardiac progenitor phenotype (KDR(low)/C-KIT(neg)) on day 5 and 0.24±0.06 expressing cardiac Troponin T on day 16. A direct relationship between ExE and cardiac differentiation efficiency was established by forming aggregates with varying ratios of SOX7 (a transcription factor required for ExE development) overexpressing or knockdown hESCs to unmanipulated hESCs. We demonstrate,in a defined,serum-free cardiac induction system,that robust and efficient cardiac differentiation is a function of endogenous ExE cell concentration,a parameter that can be directly modulated by controlling hESC aggregate size.
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Sauce D et al. (MAY 2011)
Blood 117 19 5142--51
HIV disease progression despite suppression of viral replication is associated with exhaustion of lymphopoiesis.
The mechanisms of CD4(+) T-cell count decline,the hallmark of HIV disease progression,and its relationship to elevated levels of immune activation are not fully understood. Massive depletion of CD4(+) T cells occurs during the course of HIV-1 infection,so that maintenance of adequate CD4(+) T-cell levels probably depends primarily on the capacity to renew depleted lymphocytes,that is,the lymphopoiesis. We performed here a comprehensive study of quantitative and qualitative attributes of CD34(+) hematopoietic progenitor cells directly from the blood of a large set of HIV-infected persons compared with uninfected donors,in particular the elderly. Our analyses underline a marked impairment of primary immune resources with the failure to maintain adequate lymphocyte counts. Systemic immune activation emerges as a major correlate of altered lymphopoiesis,which can be partially reversed with prolonged antiretroviral therapy. Importantly,HIV disease progression despite elite control of HIV replication or virologic success on antiretroviral treatment is associated with persistent damage to the lymphopoietic system or exhaustion of lymphopoiesis. These findings highlight the importance of primary hematopoietic resources in HIV pathogenesis and the response to antiretroviral treatments.
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Nguyen T et al. (MAY 2011)
Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research 17 10 3219--32
HDAC inhibitors potentiate the activity of the BCR/ABL kinase inhibitor KW-2449 in imatinib-sensitive or -resistant BCR/ABL+ leukemia cells in vitro and in vivo.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to determine whether histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors (HDACI) such as vorinostat or entinostat (SNDX-275) could increase the lethality of the dual Bcr/Abl-Aurora kinase inhibitor KW-2449 in various Bcr/Abl(+) human leukemia cells,including those resistant to imatinib mesylate (IM). EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Bcr/Abl(+) chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cells,including those resistant to IM (T315I,E255K),were exposed to KW-2449 in the presence or absence of vorinostat or SNDX-275,after which apoptosis and effects on signaling pathways were examined. In vivo studies combining HDACIs and KW2449 were carried out by using a systemic IM-resistant ALL xenograft model. RESULTS: Coadministration of HDACIs synergistically increased KW-2449 lethality in vitro in multiple CML and Ph(+) ALL cell types including human IM resistant cells (e.g.,BV-173/E255K and Adult/T315I). Combined treatment resulted in inactivation of Bcr/Abl and downstream targets (e.g.,STAT5 and CRKL),as well as increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and DNA damage (γH2A.X). The latter events and cell death were significantly attenuated by free radical scavengers (TBAP). Increased lethality was also observed in primary CD34(+) cells from patients with CML,but not in normal CD34(+) cells. Finally,minimally active vorinostat or SNDX275 doses markedly increased KW2449 antitumor effects and significantly prolonged the survival of murine xenografts bearing IM-resistant ALL cells (BV173/E255K). CONCLUSIONS: HDACIs increase KW-2449 lethality in Bcr/Abl(+) cells in association with inhibition of Bcr/Abl,generation of ROS,and induction of DNA damage. This strategy preferentially targets primary Bcr/Abl(+) hematopoietic cells and exhibits enhanced in vivo activity. Combining KW-2449 with HDACIs warrants attention in IM-resistant Bcr/Abl(+) leukemias.
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Cook BD et al. (JUN 2011)
Blood 117 24 6489--97
Smad1 signaling restricts hematopoietic potential after promoting hemangioblast commitment.
Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling regulates embryonic hematopoiesis via receptor-mediated activation of downstream SMAD proteins,including SMAD1. In previous work,we showed that Smad1 expression is sufficient to enhance commitment of mesoderm to hemangioblast fate. We also found indirect evidence to support a subsequent repressive function for Smad1 in hematopoiesis. To test this hypothesis directly,we developed a novel system allowing temporal control of Smad1 levels by conditional knockdown in embryonic stem cell derivatives. Depletion of Smad1 in embryoid body cultures before hemangioblast commitment limits hematopoietic potential because of a block in mesoderm development. Conversely,when Smad1 is depleted in FlK1(+) mesoderm,at a stage after hemangioblast commitment,the pool of hematopoietic progenitors is expanded. This involves enhanced expression levels for genes specific to hematopoiesis,including Gata1,Runx1 and Eklf,rather than factors required for earlier specification of the hemangioblast. The phenotype correlates with increased nuclear SMAD2 activity,indicating molecular cross-regulation between the BMP and TGF-β signaling pathways. Consistent with this mechanism,hematopoiesis was enhanced when Smad2 was directly expressed during this same developmental window. Therefore,this study reveals a temporally defined function for Smad1 in restricting the expansion of early hematopoietic progenitors.
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Miranda-Carboni GA et al. (JUL 2011)
Molecular endocrinology (Baltimore,Md.) 25 7 1126--36
Estrogens regulate osteoblast differentiation and mineralization. We identified GATA4 as a transcription factor expressed in osteoblasts and directly regulated by 17β-estradiol in this cell type but not in breast cancer cells,another estrogen-responsive tissue. Chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing) reveals that estrogen receptor α (ERα) binds to chromatin near GATA4 at five different enhancers. GATA4 and ERα are both recruited to ERα binding sites near genes that are specifically expressed in osteoblasts and control osteoblast differentiation. Maximal binding of GATA4 precedes ERα binding,and GATA4 is necessary for histone 3 lysine 4 dimethylation at ERα binding sites,suggesting that GATA4 is a pioneer factor for ERα. As such,knockdown of GATA4 reduced recruitment of ERα to DNA. Our study illustrates that GATA4 is a pioneer factor for ERα recruitment to osteoblast-specific enhancers.
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