scholarly journals Identification of a human adult cardiac stem cell population with neural crest origin

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Höving ◽  
Madlen Merten ◽  
Kazuko Elena Schmidt ◽  
Isabel Faust ◽  
Lucia Mercedes Ruiz-Perera ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTCardiovascular diseases are the major cause of death worldwide, emphasizing the necessity to better understand adult human cardiac cell biology and development. Although the adult heart was considered as a terminally differentiated organ, rare populations of cardiac stem cells (CSCs) have been described so far, with their developmental origin and endogenous function still being a matter of debate.Here, we identified a Nestin+/S100+/CD105+/Sca1+/cKit-population of CSCs in the myocardium of the adult human heart auricle. Isolated cells showed expression of characteristic neural crest-derived stem cell (NCSC) markers and kept their genetic stability during cultivationin vitro. Cultivated hCSCs efficiently gave rise to functional, beating cardiomyocytes, osteoblasts, adipocytes and neurons. Global transcriptome analysis via RNAseq showed a high similarity between the expression profiles of Nestin+/S100+/CD105+/Sca1+/cKit-hCSCs and adult human NCSCs from the nasal cavity (inferior turbinate stem cells, ITSCs). In detail, 88.1 % of all genes were significantly expressed in both stem cell populations particularly including common NCSC-markers. Based on these observations, we suggest a similar developmental origin of both stem cell populations.In summary, we identified a human adult cardiac stem cell population with neural crest-origin, which may also contribute to endogenous cardiac tissue homeostasis and tissue repairin vivo.

1990 ◽  
Vol 171 (5) ◽  
pp. 1547-1565 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Van Zant ◽  
B P Holland ◽  
P W Eldridge ◽  
J J Chen

We have studied contributions to hematopoiesis of genetically distinct stem cell populations in allophenic mice. Chimeras were made by aggregating embryos of inbred strains known to differ with respect to stem cell population kinetics. One partner strain (DBA/2) has previously been shown to normally have a stem cell (CFU-S) population of which 24% are in S-phase of the cell cycle, whereas the homologous population of the other partner strain (C57BL/6) was characterized by having only 2.6% in cycle (7). Contributions of the chimeric stem cell population to mature blood cell pools were studied throughout the life of the mice and intrinsic differences in stem cell function and aging were reflected in dynamic patterns of blood cell composition. The DBA/2 stem cell population was eclipsed by stem cells of the C57BL/6 genotype and, after 1.5-3 yr, the hemato-lymphoid composition of 22 of 27 mice studied for this long had shifted by at least 25 percentage points toward the C57BL/6 genotype. 8 of the 27 had hematolymphoid populations solely of C57BL/6 origin. To test whether or not a population of stem cells with an inherently higher cycling rate (DBA/2) might have a competitive advantage during repopulation, we engrafted allophenic marrow into lethally irradiated (C57BL/6 x DBA/2)F1 recipients. DBA/2 hematopoiesis was predominant early, far outstripping its representation in the marrow graft. Perhaps as a consequence of inherently greater DBA/2 stem cell proliferation, the populations of developmentally more restricted precursor populations (CFU-E, BFU-E, CFU-GM, CFU-GEMM) showed an overwhelming DBA/2 bias in the first 2-3 mo after engraftment. However, as in the allophenic mice themselves during the aging process, the C57BL/6 genotypic representation was ascendant over the subsequent months. The shift toward C57BL/6 genotype was first documented in the marrow and spleen precursor cell populations and was subsequently reflected in the circulating, mature blood cells. Bone marrow-derived stromal cell cultures from engrafted mice were studied and genotypic analyses showed donor representation in stromal cell populations that reflected donor hematopoietic contributions in the same recipient. Results from these studies involving two in vivo settings (allophenic mice and engraftment by allophenic marrow) are consistent with the notion that a cell autonomous difference in stem cell proliferation confers on one population a competitive repopulating advantage, but at the expense of longevity.


Sarcoma ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Trucco ◽  
David Loeb

Sarcomas represent a heterogeneous group of cancers thought to originate from malignant transformation of mesenchymal cells. There is increasing evidence that many, if not all, sarcomas contain within them tumor-initiating, or “cancer stem,” cells responsible for the initiation, maintenance, and potentially relapse and metastasis of the tumor. Various techniques have been adopted in recent years to identify putative sarcoma stem cell populations. The goal of this paper is to summarize the criteria used to identify a stem cell population, describe the more prominent markers and techniques used to isolate cancer stem cells in sarcomas, and review the evidence for the existence of cancer stem cells in sarcomas.


Biology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 435
Author(s):  
Anna L. Höving ◽  
Katharina Sielemann ◽  
Johannes F. W. Greiner ◽  
Barbara Kaltschmidt ◽  
Cornelius Knabbe ◽  
...  

For the identification of a stem cell population, the comparison of transcriptome data enables the simultaneous analysis of tens of thousands of molecular markers and thus enables the precise distinction of even closely related populations. Here, we utilized global gene expression profiling to compare two adult human stem cell populations, namely neural crest-derived inferior turbinate stem cells (ITSCs) of the nasal cavity and human cardiac stem cells (hCSCs) from the heart auricle. We detected high similarities between the transcriptomes of both stem cell populations, particularly including a range of neural crest-associated genes. However, global gene expression likewise reflected differences between the stem cell populations with regard to their niches of origin. In a broader analysis, we further identified clear similarities between ITSCs, hCSCs and other adherent stem cell populations compared to non-adherent hematopoietic progenitor cells. In summary, our observations reveal high similarities between adult human cardiac stem cells and neural crest-derived stem cells from the nasal cavity, which include a shared relation to the neural crest. The analyses provided here may help to understand underlying molecular regulators determining differences between adult human stem cell populations.


Blood ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (8) ◽  
pp. 2422-2430 ◽  
Author(s):  
FC Zeigler ◽  
BD Bennett ◽  
CT Jordan ◽  
SD Spencer ◽  
S Baumhueter ◽  
...  

The flk-2/flt-3 receptor tyrosine kinase was cloned from a hematopoietic stem cell population and is considered to play a potential role in the developmental fate of the stem cell. Using antibodies derived against the extracellular domain of the receptor, we show that stem cells from both murine fetal liver and bone marrow can express flk-2/flt-3. However, in both these tissues, there are stem cell populations that do not express the receptor. Cell cycle analysis shows that stem cells that do not express the receptor have a greater percentage of the population in G0 when compared with the flk-2/flt-3- positive population. Development of agonist antibodies to the receptor shows a proliferative role for the receptor in stem cell populations. Stimulation with an agonist antibody gives rise to an expansion of both myeloid and lymphoid cells and this effect is enhanced by the addition of kit ligand. These studies serve to further illustrate the importance of the flk-2/flt-3 receptor in the regulation of the hematopoietic stem cell.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1601-1601
Author(s):  
Ioanna Triviai ◽  
Thomas Stuebig ◽  
Birte Niebuhr ◽  
Kais Hussein ◽  
Asterios Tsiftsoglou ◽  
...  

Abstract Primary Myelofibrosis (PMF) is a chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm of alleged stem cell origin. To define the characteristics of malignant PMF stem cells previous studies have focused on the isolation and xenotransplantation of circulating and/or splenic, PMF patient - derived CD34+ stem/progenitor cells. Despite the reported engraftment of CD34+ cell pool, former analyses failed to reproduce major PMF parameters attributed to abnormal human myeloid cell differentiation. The focus of our work was to identify the stem cell population responsible for initiation and development of PMF. To assess the presence of malignant stem cells we analyzed peripheral blood of 30 PMF patients for expression of LT-HSC antigen CD133. To exclude committed myeloid and lymphoid circulating progenitors we performed lineage depletion of PBMCs and isolated CD133+ and/or CD34+ stem cells. Variable CD133+/CD34 ± and CD133-/CD34+ stem cell fractions from 15 PMF patients were assessed for their clonogenic potential in semisolid media and for reproduction of PMF morbidity in a xenotransplantation mouse model. JAK2V617F mutation was used as a genetic marker to track clonal evolution both in vitro and in vivo. In patients' PBMC we detected the consistent presence of a CD133+ population ranging from 0.3% to >30%, which varies in the expression of CD34. CD133 marks overlapping but also distinct cell populations as compared to CD34. To determine the differentiation potential of disparate stem cell populations, CD133+CD34+, CD133-CD34+ and CD133+CD34- cells were subfractionated from PB of 7 patients and assessed for clonogenic capacity. Strikingly, CD133+CD34+ cells exhibited multipotent, bipotent, and unipotent myeloid (including erythroid) and endothelial-like output, whereas CD133-CD34+ cells gave rise predominantly to lineage-restricted granulocyte/monocyte (GM) progenitors or endothelial-like progenitors. Thus, in contrast to circulating CD133-/CD34+ cells in PMF patients, CD133+ cells have a broader and more robust differentiation capacity to all myeloid cell types, including megakaryocyte /erythrocyte lineages. Four JAK2V617F+ patient samples were used to assess mutation burden at the single-cell level from representative colony types. Obtained results demonstrate an early acquisition of JAK2V617F mutation in the primitive CD133+ stem cell compartments, but also revealed an unexpected variability in the genotypes of emerging progenitors. Homozygous JAK2617F/617F progenitors were detectable in all analyzed patient samples, even if a relative low JAK2V617F burden (30%) was determined from the initial pool of CD133+ cells. A disproportionately high incidence of a homozygous JAK2V617F genotype was observed in erythroid progenitors, indicating a skewing for this lineage. Homozygosity was additionally detected in megakaryocytic and multipotent progenitors. In vivo xenotransplantation experiments of various subfractions confirm the origin of multipotent JAK2V617F+ progenitors from CD133+/CD34± stem cells. Transplantation of PMF patient-derived CD133+/CD34± stem cells in immuno-compromised mice induces abnormal human JAK2V617F+ erythroid, megakaryocytic, and monocytic differentiation, splenomegaly, bone marrow/splenic fibrosis and anemia, reproducing many aspects of PMF development. Our data provide the first evidence for the existence of a CD133+ LT-HSC population responsible for development of PMF. It is for the first time demonstrated that JAK2V617F mutation in PMF occurs at the level of a multipotent stem cell, from which all abnormal myeloid cells emanate during evolution of the disease. Identification of the stem cell compartment involved in the triggering and progression of PMF provides the basis to elucidate the nature of the complex niche interactions in myeloproliferative neoplasms. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cristina Aguilar-Sanchez ◽  
Melina Michael ◽  
Sari Pennings

Heart development in mammals is followed by a postnatal decline in cell proliferation and cell renewal from stem cell populations. A better understanding of the developmental changes in cardiac microenvironments occurring during heart maturation will be informative regarding the loss of adult regenerative potential. We reevaluate the adult heart’s mitotic potential and the reported adult cardiac stem cell populations, as these are two topics of ongoing debate. The heart’s early capacity for cell proliferation driven by progenitors and reciprocal signalling is demonstrated throughout development. The mature heart architecture and environment may be more restrictive on niches that can host progenitor cells. The engraftment issues observed in cardiac stem cell therapy trials using exogenous stem cells may indicate a lack of supporting stem cell niches, while tissue injury adds to a hostile microenvironment for transplanted cells. Engraftment may be improved by preconditioning the cultured stem cells and modulating the microenvironment to host these cells. These prospective areas of further research would benefit from a better understanding of cardiac progenitor interactions with their microenvironment throughout development and may lead to enhanced cardiac niche support for stem cell therapy engraftment.


Blood ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (8) ◽  
pp. 2422-2430 ◽  
Author(s):  
FC Zeigler ◽  
BD Bennett ◽  
CT Jordan ◽  
SD Spencer ◽  
S Baumhueter ◽  
...  

Abstract The flk-2/flt-3 receptor tyrosine kinase was cloned from a hematopoietic stem cell population and is considered to play a potential role in the developmental fate of the stem cell. Using antibodies derived against the extracellular domain of the receptor, we show that stem cells from both murine fetal liver and bone marrow can express flk-2/flt-3. However, in both these tissues, there are stem cell populations that do not express the receptor. Cell cycle analysis shows that stem cells that do not express the receptor have a greater percentage of the population in G0 when compared with the flk-2/flt-3- positive population. Development of agonist antibodies to the receptor shows a proliferative role for the receptor in stem cell populations. Stimulation with an agonist antibody gives rise to an expansion of both myeloid and lymphoid cells and this effect is enhanced by the addition of kit ligand. These studies serve to further illustrate the importance of the flk-2/flt-3 receptor in the regulation of the hematopoietic stem cell.


2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (5) ◽  
pp. 1999-2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura M. Pérez ◽  
Beatriz de Lucas ◽  
Beatriz G. Gálvez

The stem cell field has grown very rapidly during the last decade, offering the promise of innovative therapies to treat disease. Different stem cell populations have been isolated from various human adult tissues, mainly from bone marrow and adipose tissue, but many other body tissues harbor a stem cell population. Adult tissue stem cells are invariably found in discrete microenvironments termed niches, where they play key roles in tissue homeostasis by enabling lifelong optimization of organ form and function. Some diseases are known to strike at the stem cell population, through alterations in their specific microenvironments, making them non-viable. Furthermore, it has been shown that a transformed stem cell population could prompt the development of certain cancers. This review focuses on the potential negative aspects of a range of diseases on the activity of stem cells and how their potential use in cell therapies may be affected.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan Moore ◽  
Stephen Lyle

Long-lived cancer stem cells (CSCs) with indefinite proliferative potential have been identified in multiple epithelial cancer types. These cells are likely derived from transformed adult stem cells and are thought to share many characteristics with their parental population, including a quiescent slow-cycling phenotype. Various label-retaining techniques have been used to identify normal slow cycling adult stem cell populations and offer a unique methodology to functionally identify and isolate cancer stem cells. The quiescent nature of CSCs represents an inherent mechanism that at least partially explains chemotherapy resistance and recurrence in posttherapy cancer patients. Isolating and understanding the cell cycle regulatory mechanisms of quiescent cancer cells will be a key component to creation of future therapies that better target CSCs and totally eradicate tumors. Here we review the evidence for quiescent CSC populations and explore potential cell cycle regulators that may serve as future targets for elimination of these cells.


2010 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 1783-1787 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia A. Zuk

In 2002, researchers at UCLA published a manuscript in Molecular Biology of the Cell describing a novel adult stem cell population isolated from adipose tissue—the adipose-derived stem cell (ASC). Since that time, the ASC has gone on to be one of the most popular adult stem cell populations currently being used in the stem cell field. With multilineage mesodermal potential and possible ectodermal and endodermal potentials also, the ASC could conceivably be an alternate to pluripotent ES cells in both the lab and in the clinic. In this retrospective article, a historical perspective on the ASC is given together with exciting new applications for the stem cell being considered today.


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