Yasui K et al. (JAN 2003)
Stem cells (Dayton,Ohio) 21 2 143--51
Differences between peripheral blood and cord blood in the kinetics of lineage-restricted hematopoietic cells: implications for delayed platelet recovery following cord blood transplantation.
Cord blood (CB) cells are a useful source of hematopoietic cells for transplantation. The hematopoietic activities of CB cells are different from those of bone marrow and peripheral blood (PB) cells. Platelet recovery is significantly slower after transplantation with CB cells than with cells from other sources. However,the cellular mechanisms underlying these differences have not been elucidated. We compared the surface marker expression profiles of PB and CB hematopoietic cells. We focused on two surface markers of hematopoietic cell immaturity,i.e.,CD34 and AC133. In addition to differences in surface marker expression,the PB and CB cells showed nonidentical differentiation pathways from AC133(+)CD34(+) (immature) hematopoietic cells to terminally differentiated cells. The majority of the AC133(+)CD34(+) PB cells initially lost AC133 expression and eventually became AC133(-)CD34(-) cells. In contrast,the AC133(+)CD34(+) CB cells did not go through the intermediate AC133(-)CD34(+) stage and lost both markers simultaneously. Meanwhile,the vast majority of megakaryocyte progenitors were of the AC133(-)CD34(+) phenotype. We conclude that the delayed recovery of platelets after CB transplantation is due to both subpopulation distribution and the process of differentiation from AC133(+)CD34(+) cells.
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Wulf GG et al. (MAR 2003)
Blood 101 6 2434--9
Anti-CD45-mediated cytoreduction to facilitate allogeneic stem cell transplantation.
The CD45 antigen is present on all cells of the hematopoietic lineage. Using a murine model,we have determined whether a lytic CD45 monoclonal antibody can produce persistent aplasia and whether it could facilitate syngeneic or allogeneic stem cell engraftment. After its systemic administration,we found saturating quantities of the antibody on all cells expressing the CD45 antigen,both in marrow and in lymphoid organs. All leukocyte subsets in peripheral blood were markedly diminished during or soon after anti-CD45 treatment,but only the effect on the lymphoid compartment was sustained. In contrast to the prolonged depletion of T and B lymphocytes from the thymus and spleen,peripheral blood neutrophils began to recover within 24 hours after the first anti-CD45 injection and marrow progenitor cells were spared from destruction,despite being coated with saturating quantities of anti-CD45. Given the transient effects of the monoclonal antibody on myelopoiesis and the more persistent effects on lymphopoiesis,we asked whether this agent could contribute to donor hematopoietic engraftment following nonmyeloablative transplantation. Treatment with anti-CD45 alone did not enhance syngeneic engraftment,consistent with its inability to destroy progenitor cells and permit competitive repopulation with syngeneic donor stem cells. By contrast,the combination of anti-CD45 and an otherwise inactive dose of total-body irradiation allowed engraftment of H2 fully allogeneic donor stem cells. We attribute this result to the recipient immunosuppression produced by depletion of CD45(+) lymphocytes. Monoclonal antibodies of this type may therefore have an adjunctive role in nonmyeloablative conditioning regimens for allogeneic stem cell transplantation.
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Yates F et al. (DEC 2002)
Blood 100 12 3942--9
Gene therapy of RAG-2-/- mice: sustained correction of the immunodeficiency.
Patients with mutations of either RAG-1 or RAG-2 genes suffer from severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) characterized by the lack of T and B lymphocytes. The only curative treatment today consists of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation,which is only partially successful in the absence of an HLA genoidentical donor,thus justifying research to find an alternative therapeutic approach. To this end,RAG-2-deficient mice were used to test whether retrovirally mediated ex vivo gene transfer into HSCs could provide long-term correction of the immunologic deficiency. Murine RAG-2-/-Sca-1(+) selected bone marrow cells were transduced with a modified Moloney leukemia virus (MLV)-based MND (myeloproliferative sarcoma virus enhancer,negative control region deleted,dl587rev primer-binding site substituted) retroviral vector containing the RAG-2 cDNA and transplanted into RAG-2-/- sublethally irradiated mice (3Gy). Two months later,T- and B-cell development was achieved in all mice. Diverse repertoire of T cells as well as proliferative capacity in the presence of mitogens,allogeneic cells,and keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) were shown. B-cell function as shown by serum Ig levels and antibody response to a challenge by KLH also developed. Lymphoid subsets and function were shown to be stable over a one-year period without evidence of any detectable toxicity. Noteworthy,a selective advantage for transduced lymphoid cells was evidenced by comparative provirus quantification in lymphoid and myeloid lineages. Altogether,this study demonstrates the efficiency of ex vivo RAG-2 gene transfer in HSCs to correct the immune deficiency of RAG-2-/- mice,constituting a significant step toward clinical application.
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Kuç et al. (FEB 2003)
Blood 101 3 869--76
Identification of a novel class of human adherent CD34- stem cells that give rise to SCID-repopulating cells.
Here we describe the in vitro generation of a novel adherent cell fraction derived from highly enriched,mobilized CD133(+) peripheral blood cells after their culture with Flt3/Flk2 ligand and interleukin-6 for 3 to 5 weeks. These cells lack markers of hematopoietic stem cells,endothelial cells,mesenchymal cells,dendritic cells,and stromal fibroblasts. However,all adherent cells expressed the adhesion molecules VE-cadherin,CD54,and CD44. They were also positive for CD164 and CD172a (signal regulatory protein-alpha) and for a stem cell antigen defined by the recently described antibody W7C5. Adherent cells can either spontaneously or upon stimulation with stem cell factor give rise to a transplantable,nonadherent CD133(+)CD34(-) stem cell subset. These cells do not generate in vitro hematopoietic colonies. However,their transplantation into nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID) mice induced substantially higher long-term multilineage engraftment compared with that of freshly isolated CD34(+) cells,suggesting that these cells are highly enriched in SCID-repopulating cells. In addition to cells of the myeloid lineage,nonadherent CD34(-) cells were able to give rise to human cells with B-,T-,and natural killer-cell phenotype. Hence,these cells possess a distinct in vivo differentiation potential compared with that of CD34(+) stem cells and may therefore provide an alternative to CD34(+) progenitor cells for transplantation.
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Shimakura Y et al. (JAN 2000)
Stem cells (Dayton,Ohio) 18 3 183--9
Murine stromal cell line HESS-5 maintains reconstituting ability of Ex vivo-generated hematopoietic stem cells from human bone marrow and cytokine-mobilized peripheral blood.
Human bone marrow (BM) or mobilized peripheral blood (mPB) CD34(+) cells have been shown to loose their stem cell quality during culture period more easily than those from cord blood (CB). We previously reported that human umbilical CB stem cells could effectively be expanded in the presence of human recombinant cytokines and a newly established murine bone marrow stromal cell line HESS-5. In this study we assessed the efficacy of this xenogeneic coculture system using human BM and mPB CD34(+) cells as materials. We measured the generation of CD34(+)CD38(-) cells and colony-forming units,and assessed severe-combined immunodeficient mouse-repopulating cell (SRC) activity using cells five days after serum-free cytokine-containing culture in the presence or the absence of a direct contact with HESS-5 cells. As compared with the stroma-free culture,the xenogeneic coculture was significantly superior on expansion of CD34(+)CD38(-) cells and colony-forming cells and on maintenance of SRC activity. The PKH26 study demonstrated that cell division was promoted faster in cells cocultured with HESS-5 cells than in cells cultured without HESS-5 cells. These results indicate that HESS-5 supports rapid generation of primitive progenitor cells (PPC) and maintains reconstituting ability of newly generated stem cells during ex vivo culture irrespective of the source of samples. This xenogeneic coculture system will be useful for ex vivo manipulation such as gene transduction to promote cell division and the generation of PPC and to prevent loss of stem cell quality.
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Donahue RE et al. (JAN 2000)
Blood 95 2 445--52
High levels of lymphoid expression of enhanced green fluorescent protein in nonhuman primates transplanted with cytokine-mobilized peripheral blood CD34(+) cells.
We have used a murine retrovirus vector containing an enhanced green fluorescent protein complimentary DNA (EGFP cDNA) to dynamically follow vector-expressing cells in the peripheral blood (PB) of transplanted rhesus macaques. Cytokine mobilized CD34(+) cells were transduced with an amphotropic vector that expressed EGFP and a dihydrofolate reductase cDNA under control of the murine stem cell virus promoter. The transduction protocol used the CH-296 recombinant human fibronectin fragment and relatively high concentrations of the flt-3 ligand and stem cell factor. Following transplantation of the transduced cells,up to 55% EGFP-expressing granulocytes were obtained in the peripheral circulation during the early posttransplant period. This level of myeloid marking,however,decreased to 0.1% or lower within 2 weeks. In contrast,EGFP expression in PB lymphocytes rose from 2%-5% shortly following transplantation to 10% or greater by week 5. After 10 weeks,the level of expression in PB lymphocytes continued to remain at 3%-5% as measured by both flow cytometry and Southern blot analysis,and EGFP expression was observed in CD4(+),CD8(+),CD20(+),and CD16/56(+) lymphocyte subsets. EGFP expression was only transiently detected in red blood cells and platelets soon after transplantation. Such sustained levels of lymphocyte marking may be therapeutic in a number of human gene therapy applications that require targeting of the lymphoid compartment. The transient appearance of EGFP(+) myeloid cells suggests that transduction of a lineage-restricted myeloid progenitor capable of short-term engraftment was obtained with this protocol. (Blood. 2000;95:445-452)
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