Xu J et al. (APR 2010)
Genes & development 24 8 783--98
Transcriptional silencing of gamma-globin by BCL11A involves long-range interactions and cooperation with SOX6.
The developmental switch from human fetal (gamma) to adult (beta) hemoglobin represents a clinically important example of developmental gene regulation. The transcription factor BCL11A is a central mediator of gamma-globin silencing and hemoglobin switching. Here we determine chromatin occupancy of BCL11A at the human beta-globin locus and other genomic regions in vivo by high-resolution chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-chip analysis. BCL11A binds the upstream locus control region (LCR),epsilon-globin,and the intergenic regions between gamma-globin and delta-globin genes. A chromosome conformation capture (3C) assay shows that BCL11A reconfigures the beta-globin cluster by modulating chromosomal loop formation. We also show that BCL11A and the HMG-box-containing transcription factor SOX6 interact physically and functionally during erythroid maturation. BCL11A and SOX6 co-occupy the human beta-globin cluster along with GATA1,and cooperate in silencing gamma-globin transcription in adult human erythroid progenitors. These findings collectively demonstrate that transcriptional silencing of gamma-globin genes by BCL11A involves long-range interactions and cooperation with SOX6. Our findings provide insight into the mechanism of BCL11A action and new clues for the developmental gene regulatory programs that function at the beta-globin locus.
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van den Akker E et al. (SEP 2010)
Haematologica 95 9 1594--8
The majority of the in vitro erythroid expansion potential resides in CD34(-) cells, outweighing the contribution of CD34(+) cells and significantly increasing the erythroblast yield from peripheral blood samples.
The study of human erythropoiesis in health and disease requires a robust culture system that consistently and reliably generates large numbers of immature erythroblasts that can be induced to differentiate synchronously. We describe a culture method modified from Leberbauer et al. (2005) and obtain a homogenous population of erythroblasts from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) without prior purification of CD34(+) cells. This pure population of immature erythroblasts can be expanded to obtain 4x10(8) erythroblasts from 1x10(8) PBMC after 13-14 days in culture. Upon synchronized differentiation,high levels of enucleation (80-90%) and low levels of cell death (textless10%) are achieved. We compared the yield of erythroblasts obtained from PBMC,CD34(+) cells or PBMC depleted of CD34(+) cells and show that CD34(-) cells represent the most significant early erythroid progenitor population. This culture system may be particularly useful for investigating the pathophysiology of anemic patients where only small blood volumes are available.
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Singbrant S et al. (JUN 2010)
Blood 115 23 4689--98
Canonical BMP signaling is dispensable for hematopoietic stem cell function in both adult and fetal liver hematopoiesis, but essential to preserve colon architecture.
Numerous publications have described the importance of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling in the specification of hematopoietic tissue in developing embryos. Here we investigate the full role of canonical BMP signaling in both adult and fetal liver hematopoiesis using conditional knockout strategies because conventional disruption of components of the BMP signaling pathway result in early death of the embryo. By targeting both Smad1 and Smad5,we have generated a double-knockout mouse with complete disruption of canonical BMP signaling. Interestingly,concurrent deletion of Smad1 and Smad5 results in death because of extrahematopoietic pathologic changes in the colon. However,Smad1/Smad5-deficient bone marrow cells can compete normally with wild-type cells and display unaffected self-renewal and differentiation capacity when transplanted into lethally irradiated recipients. Moreover,although BMP receptor expression is increased in fetal liver,fetal liver cells deficient in both Smad1 and Smad5 remain competent to long-term reconstitute lethally irradiated recipients in a multilineage manner. In conclusion,canonical BMP signaling is not required to maintain either adult or fetal liver hematopoiesis,despite its crucial role in the initial patterning of hematopoiesis in early embryonic development.
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Shao L et al. (JUN 2010)
Blood 115 23 4707--14
Deletion of proapoptotic Puma selectively protects hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells against high-dose radiation.
Bone marrow injury is a major adverse side effect of radiation and chemotherapy. Attempts to limit such damage are warranted,but their success requires a better understanding of how radiation and anticancer drugs harm the bone marrow. Here,we report one pivotal role of the BH3-only protein Puma in the radiosensitivity of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs). Puma deficiency in mice confers resistance to high-dose radiation in a hematopoietic cell-autonomous manner. Unexpectedly,loss of one Puma allele is sufficient to confer mice radioresistance. Interestingly,null mutation in Puma protects both primitive and differentiated hematopoietic cells from damage caused by low-dose radiation but selectively protects HSCs and HPCs against high-dose radiation,thereby accelerating hematopoietic regeneration. Consistent with these findings,Puma is required for radiation-induced apoptosis in HSCs and HPCs,and Puma is selectively induced by irradiation in primitive hematopoietic cells,and this induction is impaired in Puma-heterozygous cells. Together,our data indicate that selective targeting of p53 downstream apoptotic targets may represent a novel strategy to protecting HSCs and HPCs in patients undergoing intensive cancer radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
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Nagano M et al. (AUG 2010)
Stem cells and development 19 8 1195--210
Hypoxia responsive mesenchymal stem cells derived from human umbilical cord blood are effective for bone repair.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are highly useful in a variety of cell therapies owing to their multipotential differentiation capability. MSCs derived from umbilical cord blood are generally isolated by their plastic adherence without using specific cell surface markers and examined for their osteogenic,adipogenic,and chondrogenic differentiation properties retrospectively. Here,we report 2 subpopulations of MSCs,separated based on aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity. MSCs with a high ALDH activity (Alde-High) proliferated more than those with a low ALDH activity (Alde-Low). Alde-High MSCs had a greater ability to differentiate than Alde-Low MSCs in in vitro culture. Transplantation of Alde-High MSCs into fractured mouse femurs enabled early repair of tissues and rapid bone substitution. Alde-High MSCs were also more responsive to hypoxia than Alde-Low MSCs,with the upregulation of Flt-1,CXCR4,and Angiopoietin-2. Thus,MSCs with a high ALDH activity might serve as an effective therapeutic tool for healing fractures within a short period of time.
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Ramezani A and Hawley RG ( 2010)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 614 77--100
Strategies to insulate lentiviral vector-expressed transgenes.
Lentiviruses are capable of infecting many cells irrespective of their cycling status,stably inserting DNA copies of the viral RNA genomes into host chromosomes. This property has led to the development of lentiviral vectors for high-efficiency gene transfer to a wide variety of cell types,from slowly proliferating hematopoietic stem cells to terminally differentiated neurons. Regardless of their advantage over gammaretroviral vectors,which can only introduce transgenes into target cells that are actively dividing,lentiviral vectors are still susceptible to chromosomal position effects that result in transgene silencing or variegated expression. In this chapter,various genetic regulatory elements are described that can be incorporated within lentiviral vector backbones to minimize the influences of neighboring chromatin on single-copy transgene expression. The modifications include utilization of strong internal enhancer-promoter sequences,addition of scaffold/matrix attachment regions,and flanking the transcriptional unit with chromatin domain insulators. Protocols are provided to evaluate the performance as well as the relative biosafety of lentiviral vectors containing these elements.
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Lassailly F et al. (JUL 2010)
Blood 115 26 5347--54
Microenvironmental contaminations" induced by fluorescent lipophilic dyes used for noninvasive in vitro and in vivo cell tracking."
Determining how normal and leukemic stem cells behave in vivo,in a dynamic and noninvasive way,remains a major challenge. Most optical tracking technologies rely on the use of fluorescent or bioluminescent reporter genes,which need to be stably expressed in the cells of interest. Because gene transfer in primary leukemia samples represents a major risk to impair their capability to engraft in a xenogenic context,we evaluated the possibility to use gene transfer-free labeling technologies. The lipophilic dye 3,3,3',3' tetramethylindotricarbocyanine iodide (DiR) was selected among 4 near-infrared (NIR) staining technologies. Unfortunately we report here a massive transfer of the dye occurring toward the neighbor cells both in vivo and in vitro. We further demonstrate that all lipophilic dyes tested in this study (1,1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindotricarbocyanine perchlorate [DiI],DiD,DiR,and PKH26) can give rise to microenvironmental contamination,including when used in suboptimal concentration,after extensive washing procedures and in the absence of phagocytosis or marked cell death. This was observed from all cell types tested. Eventually,we show that this microenvironmental contamination is mediated by both direct cell-cell contacts and diffusible microparticles. We conclude that tracking of labeled cells using non-genetically encoded markers should always be accompanied by drastic cross validation using multimodality approaches.
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Sondergaard CS et al. (JAN 2010)
Journal of translational medicine 8 24
Human cord blood progenitors with high aldehyde dehydrogenase activity improve vascular density in a model of acute myocardial infarction.
UNLABELLED: Human stem cells from adult sources have been shown to contribute to the regeneration of muscle,liver,heart,and vasculature. The mechanisms by which this is accomplished are,however,still not well understood. We tested the engraftment and regenerative potential of human umbilical cord blood-derived ALDH(hi)Lin(-),and ALDH(lo)Lin(-) cells following transplantation to NOD/SCID or NOD/SCID beta2m null mice with experimentally induced acute myocardial infarction. We used combined nanoparticle labeling and whole organ fluorescent imaging to detect human cells in multiple organs 48 hours post transplantation. Engraftment and regenerative effects of cell treatment were assessed four weeks post transplantation. We found that ALDH(hi)Lin(-) stem cells specifically located to the site of injury 48 hours post transplantation and engrafted the infarcted heart at higher frequencies than ALDH(lo)Lin(-) committed progenitor cells four weeks post transplantation. We found no donor derived cardiomyocytes and few endothelial cells of donor origin. Cell treatment was not associated with any detectable functional improvement at the four week endpoint. There was,however,a significant increase in vascular density in the central infarct zone of ALDH(hi)Lin(-) cell-treated mice,as compared to PBS and ALDH(lo)Lin(-) cell-treated mice. CONCLUSIONS: Our data indicate that adult human stem cells do not become a significant part of the regenerating tissue,but rapidly home to and persist only temporarily at the site of hypoxic injury to exert trophic effects on tissue repair thereby enhancing vascular recovery.
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van den Akker E et al. (AUG 2010)
Haematologica 95 8 1278--86
Investigating the key membrane protein changes during in vitro erythropoiesis of protein 4.2 (-) cells (mutations Chartres 1 and 2).
BACKGROUND: Protein 4.2 deficiency caused by mutations in the EPB42 gene results in hereditary spherocytosis with characteristic alterations of CD47,CD44 and RhAG. We decided to investigate at which stage of erythropoiesis these hallmarks of protein 4.2 deficiency arise in a novel protein 4.2 patient and whether they cause disruption to the band 3 macrocomplex. DESIGN AND METHODS: We used immunoprecipitations and detergent extractability to assess the strength of protein associations within the band 3 macrocomplex and with the cytoskeleton in erythrocytes. Patient erythroblasts were cultured from peripheral blood mononuclear cells to study the effects of protein 4.2 deficiency during erythropoiesis. RESULTS: We report a patient with two novel mutations in EPB42 resulting in complete protein 4.2 deficiency. Immunoprecipitations revealed a weakened ankyrin-1-band 3 interaction in erythrocytes resulting in increased band 3 detergent extractability. CD44 abundance and its association with the cytoskeleton were increased. Erythroblast differentiation revealed that protein 4.2 and band 3 appear simultaneously and associate early in differentiation. Protein 4.2 deficiency results in lower CD47,higher CD44 expression and increased RhAG glycosylation starting from the basophilic stage. The normal downregulation of CD44 expression was not seen during protein 4.2(-) erythroblast differentiation. Knockdown of CD47 did not increase CD44 expression,arguing against a direct reciprocal relationship. CONCLUSIONS: We have established that the characteristic changes caused by protein 4.2 deficiency occur early during erythropoiesis. We postulate that weakening of the ankyrin-1-band 3 association during protein 4.2 deficiency is compensated,in part,by increased CD44-cytoskeleton binding.
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Cammett TJ et al. (FEB 2010)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 8 3447--52
Construction and genetic selection of small transmembrane proteins that activate the human erythropoietin receptor.
This work describes a genetic approach to isolate small,artificial transmembrane (TM) proteins with biological activity. The bovine papillomavirus E5 protein is a dimeric,44-amino acid TM protein that transforms cells by specifically binding and activating the platelet-derived growth factor beta receptor (PDGFbetaR). We used the E5 protein as a scaffold to construct a retrovirus library expressing approximately 500,000 unique 44-amino acid proteins with randomized TM domains. We screened this library to select small,dimeric TM proteins that were structurally unrelated to erythropoietin (EPO),but specifically activated the human EPO receptor (hEPOR). These proteins did not activate the murine EPOR or the PDGFbetaR. Genetic studies with one of these activators suggested that it interacted with the TM domain of the hEPOR. Furthermore,this TM activator supported erythroid differentiation of primary human hematopoietic progenitor cells in vitro in the absence of EPO. Thus,we have changed the specificity of a protein so that it no longer recognizes its natural target but,instead,modulates an entirely different protein. This represents a novel strategy to isolate small artificial proteins that affect diverse membrane proteins. We suggest the word traptamer" for these transmembrane aptamers."
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Nakazawa G et al. (JAN 2010)
JACC. Cardiovascular interventions 3 1 68--75
Anti-CD34 antibodies immobilized on the surface of sirolimus-eluting stents enhance stent endothelialization.
OBJECTIVES: In this study,we hypothesized that an antihuman-CD34 antibody immobilized on the surface of commercially available sirolimus-eluting stents (SES) could enhance re-endothelialization compared with SES alone. BACKGROUND: Previous experience with antihuman-CD34 antibody surface modified Genous stents (GS) (OrbusNeich Medical,Fort Lauderdale,Florida) has shown enhanced stent endothelialization in vivo. METHODS: In the phase 1 study,stents were deployed in 21 pig coronary arteries for single stenting (9 vessels: 3 GS,3 SES,and 3 bare-metal stents) and overlapping stenting with various combinations (12 vessels: 4 GS+GS,4 SES+SES,and 4 GS+SES) and harvested at 14 days for scanning electron and confocal microscopy. In phase 2,immobilized anti-CD34 antibody coating was applied on commercially available SES (SES-anti-CD34,n = 7) and compared with GS (n = 8) and SES (n = 7) and examined at 3 and 14 days by scanning electron/confocal microscopy analysis. RESULTS: In phase 1,single stent implantation showed greatest endothelialization in GS (99%) and in bare-metal stent (99%) compared with SES (55%,p = 0.048). In overlapping stents,endothelialization at the overlapping zone was significantly greater in GS+GS (95 +/- 6%) and GS+SES (79 +/- 5%) compared with the SES+SES (36 +/- 14%) group (p = 0.007). In phase 2,SES-anti-CD34 resulted in increased endothelialization compared with SES alone at 3 days (SES-anti-CD34 36 +/- 26%; SES 7 +/- 3%; and GS 76 +/- 8%; p = 0.01),and 14 days (SES-anti-CD34 82 +/- 8%; SES 53 +/- 20%; and GS 98 +/- 2%; p = 0.009). CONCLUSIONS: Immobilization of anti-CD34 antibody on SES enhances endothelialization and may potentially be an effective therapeutic alternative to improve currently available drug-eluting stents.
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Randrianarison-Huetz V et al. (APR 2010)
Blood 115 14 2784--95
Gfi-1B controls human erythroid and megakaryocytic differentiation by regulating TGF-beta signaling at the bipotent erythro-megakaryocytic progenitor stage.
Growth factor independence-1B (Gfi-1B) is a transcriptional repressor essential for erythropoiesis and megakaryopoiesis. Targeted gene disruption of GFI1B in mice leads to embryonic lethality resulting from failure to produce definitive erythrocytes,hindering the study of Gfi-1B function in adult hematopoiesis. We here show that,in humans,Gfi-1B controls the development of erythrocytes and megakaryocytes by regulating the proliferation and differentiation of bipotent erythro-megakaryocytic progenitors. We further identify in this cell population the type III transforming growth factor-beta receptor gene,TGFBR3,as a direct target of Gfi-1B. Knockdown of Gfi-1B results in altered transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) signaling as shown by the increase in Smad2 phosphorylation and its inability to associate to the transcription intermediary factor 1-gamma (TIF1-gamma). Because the Smad2/TIF1-gamma complex is known to specifically regulate erythroid differentiation,we propose that,by repressing TGF-beta type III receptor (TbetaRIotaII) expression,Gfi-1B favors the Smad2/TIF1-gamma interaction downstream of TGF-beta signaling,allowing immature progenitors to differentiate toward the erythroid lineage.
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