Allergen stimulates bone marrow CD34+ cells to release IL-5 in vitro; a mechanism involved in eosinophilic inflammation?

Allergy ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 59 (10) ◽  
pp. 1080-1086 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.-K. Johansson ◽  
M. Sjostrand ◽  
M. Tomaki ◽  
A.-M. Samulesson ◽  
J. Lotvall
Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4363-4363
Author(s):  
Alexandre Janel ◽  
Nathalie Boiret-Dupré ◽  
Juliette Berger ◽  
Céline Bourgne ◽  
Richard Lemal ◽  
...  

Abstract Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) function is critical in maintaining hematopoiesis continuously throughout the lifespan of an organism and any change in their ability to self-renew and/or to differentiate into blood cell lineages induces severe diseases. Postnatally, HSC are mainly located in bone marrow where their stem cell fate is regulated through a complex network of local influences, thought to be concentrated in the bone marrow (BM) niche. Despite more than 30 years of research, the precise location of the HSC niche in human BM remains unclear because most observations were obtained from mice models. BM harvesting collects macroscopic coherent tissue aggregates in a cell suspension variably diluted with blood. The qualitative interest of these tissue aggregates, termed hematons, was already reported (first by I. Blaszek's group (Blaszek et al., 1988, 1990) and by our group (Boiret et al., 2003)) yet they remain largely unknown. Should hematons really be seen as elementary BM units, they must accommodate hematopoietic niches and must be a complete ex vivo surrogate of BM tissue. In this study, we analyzed hematons as single tissue structures. Biological samples were collected from i) healthy donor bone marrow (n= 8); ii) either biological samples collected for routine analysis by selecting bone marrow with normal analysis results (n=5); or iii) from spongy bone collected from the femoral head during hip arthroplasty (n=4). After isolation of hematons, we worked at single level, we used immunohistochemistry techniques, scanning electronic microscopy, confocal microscopy, flow cytometry and cell culture. Each hematon constitutes a miniature BM structure organized in lobular form around the vascular tree. Hematons are organized structures, supported by a network of cells with numerous cytoplasmic expansions associated with an amorphous structure corresponding to the extracellular matrix. Most of the adipocytes are located on the periphery, and hematopoietic cells can be observed as retained within the mesenchymal network. Although there is a degree of inter-donor variability in the cellular contents of hematons (on average 73 +/- 10 x103 cells per hematon), we observed precursors of all cell lines in each structure. We detected a higher frequency of CD34+ cells than in filtered bone marrow, representing on average 3% and 1% respectively (p<0.01). Also, each hematon contains CFU-GM, BFU-E, CFU-Mk and CFU-F cells. Mesenchymal cells are located mainly on the periphery and seem to participate in supporting the structure. The majority of mesenchymal cells isolated from hematons (21/24) sustain in vitro hematopoiesis. Interestingly, more than 90% of the hematons studied contained LTC-ICs. Furthermore, when studied using confocal microscopy, a co-localization of CD34+ cells with STRO1+ mesenchymal cells was frequently observed (75% under 10 µm of the nearest STRO-1+ cell, association statistically highly significant; p <1.10-16). These results indicate the presence of one or several stem cell niches housing highly primitive progenitor cells. We are confirming these in vitro data with an in vivo xenotransplantation model. These structures represent the elementary functional units of adult hematopoietic tissue and are a particularly attractive model for studying homeostasis of the BM niche and the pathological changes occurring during disease. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 97 (4) ◽  
pp. 1035-1042 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamila Louahed ◽  
Yuhong Zhou ◽  
W. Lee Maloy ◽  
Pyapalli U. Rani ◽  
Christine Weiss ◽  
...  

Abstract The interleukin 9 (IL-9) pathway has recently been associated with the asthmatic phenotype including an eosinophilic tissue inflammation. The mechanism by which IL-9 affects eosinophils (eos) is not known. To investigate whether this cytokine has a direct activity on the development of eos and eosinophilic inflammation, a model of thioglycolate-induced peritoneal inflammation was used in IL-9 transgenic (TG5) and background strain (FVB) mice. In this model, a transient eosinophilic infiltration in the peritoneal cavity was observed in FVB mice 12 to 24 hours after thioglycolate injection that coincided with peak IL-5 and IL-9 release. In contrast, TG5 mice developed a massive eosinophilia that persisted at high levels (81% of total cells) even 72 hours after thioglycolate injection. Release of eosinophilic major basic protein (MBP), IL-4, and IL-5 to the peritoneal cavity of these mice was significantly increased when compared with the control FVB strain. To study the mechanism by which IL-9 exerts its effect on eos, bone marrow or peritoneal cells were cultured in the presence of IL-5, IL-9, or their combination in vitro. IL-5 alone was able to generate significant numbers of eos in TG5 but not FVB mice, whereas a combination of IL-5 and IL-9 induced marked eosinophilia in both strains indicating a synergism between these 2 cytokines. These data suggest that IL-9 may promote and sustain eosinophilic inflammation via IL-5–driven eos maturation of precursors.


Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 95 (2) ◽  
pp. 581-585 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vishwanath Bhattacharya ◽  
Peter A. McSweeney ◽  
Qun Shi ◽  
Benedetto Bruno ◽  
Atsushi Ishida ◽  
...  

The authors have shown accelerated endothelialization on polyethylene terephthalate (PET) grafts preclotted with autologous bone marrow. Bone marrow cells have a subset of early progenitor cells that express the CD34 antigen on their surfaces. A recent in vitro study has shown that CD34+ cells can differentiate into endothelial cells. The current study was designed to determine whether CD34+ progenitor cells would enhance vascular graft healing in a canine model. The authors used composite grafts implanted in the dog's descending thoracic aorta (DTA) for 4 weeks. The 8-mm × 12-cm composite grafts had a 4-cm PET graft in the center and 4-cm standard ePTFE grafts at each end. The entire composite was coated with silicone rubber to make it impervious; thus, the PET segment was shielded from perigraft and pannus ingrowth. There were 5 study grafts and 5 control grafts. On the day before surgery, 120 mL bone marrow was aspirated, and CD34+ cells were enriched using an immunomagnetic bead technique, yielding an average of 11.4 ± 5.3 × 106. During surgery, these cells were mixed with venous blood and seeded onto the PET segment of composite study grafts; the control grafts were treated with venous blood only. Hematoxylin and eosin, immunocytochemical, and AgNO3staining demonstrated significant increases of surface endothelialization on the seeded grafts (92% ± 3.4% vs 26.6% ± 7.6%; P = .0001) with markedly increased microvessels in the neointima, graft wall, and external area compared with controls. In dogs, CD34+ cell seeding enhances vascular graft endothelialization; this suggests practical therapeutic applications.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1206-1206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sorcha Isabella O'Byrne ◽  
Natalina Elliott ◽  
Gemma Buck ◽  
Siobhan Rice ◽  
David O'Connor ◽  
...  

Introduction: Children with Down syndrome (DS) have a markedly increased risk of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), suggesting that trisomy 21 (T21) has specific effects on hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) biology in early life. Data from human fetal liver (FL) indicates that T21 alters fetal hematopoiesis, causing multiple defects in lympho-myelopoiesis. The impact of T21 on fetal B lymphopoiesis and how this may underpin the increase in ALL is not well known. We have recently found that fetal bone marrow (FBM) rather than FL is the main site of B lymphopoiesis; with a marked enrichment of fetal-specific progenitors (early lymphoid progenitors, ELP and PreProB progenitors) that lie upstream of adult type ProB progenitors (O'Byrne et al, Blood, in press). Previous preliminary data suggested that B progenitors were also reduced in T21 FBM (Roy et al, Blood. 124, 4331). Aim: To dissect putative molecular mechanisms responsible for the defects in T21 FBM B-lymphopoiesis and its association with childhood DS ALL. Methods: Second trimester human FBM and paediatric ALL samples were obtained from the Human Developmental Biology Resource and UK Childhood Leukaemia Cell Bank respectively. Multiparameter flow cytometry/sorting, transcriptome analysis by RNA-sequencing and microarray, and stromal co-culture assays were used to characterize HSPC and mesenchymal stromal cells (MSC) from normal (NM) disomic (n=21-35) and T21 (n=7-12) human FBM; RNASeq was performed on cytogenetically matched non-DS (n=13) and DS ALL (n=7). Results: In contrast to NM FBM, fetal specific progenitors were virtually absent (CD34+CD10-CD19-CD127+ ELP 2.8±0.4% vs. 0.8±0.4% of CD34+ cells) or very severely reduced (CD34+CD10-CD19+ PreProB 12.8±1 vs 2.6±0.7%) in T21 FBM. This was despite a >4-fold increase in the frequency of immunophenotypic HSC (4.2±1.2% vs 0.9±0.2% of CD34+ cells) and similar frequencies of MPP and LMPP in T21 FBM. As in adult BM, the vast majority of B progenitors in T21 FBM were CD34+CD10+CD19+ ProB progenitors with a frequency (28.8±8.3%) similar to NM FBM (30.3±2.3% of CD34+ cells). Thus, T21 causes a severe block in B-progenitor commitment at the LMPP stage, in tandem with a compensatory expansion of ProB progenitors. Consistent with this, T21 FBM HSC, MPP and LMPP had reduced B cell potential in vitro compared to NM FBM in MS5 co-cultures. RNAseq of NM (n=3) and T21 (n=3) FBM HSPC demonstrated global transcriptomic disruption by T21, with increased gene expression in HSC, MPP, LMPP and ProB progenitors. Cell cycle genes were enriched in T21 ProB progenitors. Despite these functional and global gene expression differences, expression of key B-lineage commitment genes was maintained suggesting the defect in B-lymphopoiesis may be secondary to lineage skewing of multipotent progenitors towards a non-B lymphoid fate and/or mediated by extrinsic factors. GSEA pointed to a role for multiple inflammatory pathways in T21 hematopoiesis with dysregulation of IFNα, IL6 and TGFβ signalling pathways in T21 HSC/LMPP. To investigate the role of the T21 microenvironment, we co-cultured NM HSC, MPP and LMPP with T21 or NM primary FBM MSC. T21 FBM MSC (n=3) had reduced capacity to support B cell differentiation in vitro consistent with perturbation of MSC function by T21. Similar to T21 FBM HSPC, transcriptomic analysis of T21 FBM MSC by microarray showed enrichment for IFNα signalling compared to NM; and T21 HSPC and MSC both showed increased gene expression for IFNα receptors IFNAR1 and IFNAR2, which are encoded on chromosome 21. Since IFNα was undetectable by ELISA of conditioned media from NM and T21 MSC, differences in secreted IFNα from MSC are unlikely to fully explain the increased IFN signalling in T21 HSPC and MSC. This suggests that T21 may drive autocrine rather than paracrine IFN signalling in FBM cells. Finally, RNASeq showed perturbed inflammatory signalling in DS ALL compared to non-DS ALL, suggesting a role for T21-driven inflammatory pathways in the biology of DS ALL. Conclusions: These data show that T21 severely impairs B lymphopoiesis in FBM and is associated with expression of proinflammatory gene expression programs in T21 FBM HSPC and MSC and DS ALL. The compensatory expansion of T21 FBM ProB progenitors, through self-renewal or via an alternative differentiation pathway; with concomitant T21-driven proinflammatory signalling may underpin the increased risk of B progenitor ALL in childhood. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 4952-4952
Author(s):  
Federica Servida ◽  
Claudia Vener ◽  
Viviana Tubazio ◽  
Umberto Gianelli ◽  
Paola Rafaniello Raviele ◽  
...  

Abstract Myelofibrosis with myeloid metaplasia (MMM) is a chronic myeloproliferative disorder (CMPD) characterized by clonal hematopoietic proliferation, reactive marrow fibrosis and extramedullary hematopoiesis. Twenty CMPDs, previously diagnosed as chronic idiopathic myelofibrosis (CIMF), were reviewed according to the WHO morphological parameters (Vardiman et al., 2001) and classified as prefibrotic-CIMF (p-CIMF), fibrotic-CIMF (f-CIMF), polycythemia vera (PV) and post-polycythaemic myelofibrosis (PPMF). Patients median age was 67 yrs (range: 45–84), generally presenting cytogenetic abnormalities and treated with chemotherapy. Quantitation of peripheral blood (PB) CD34+ cells was carried out according to ISHAGE gating strategy. Clonogenic assays were performed both on bone marrow mononuclear cells (BM) and on cells extracted from the bone marrow biopsy (BMB) using either flushing and trypsin digestion. Myeloid progenitor cell number (CFU-GM) was evaluated in semisolid medium. Fibroblast progenitor cell number (CFU-F) was studied seeding cells in IMDM medium supplemented with 20% FBS. Microvessel density hot spots (MVD) was evaluated according to Weidner et. al., 1991. Data are summarized in Table 1. Circulating CD34+ cells were higher in all classes in comparison with normals but a clearcut decrease was observed from p-CIMF to f-CIMF and from PV to PPMF. A similar trend was observed in committed progenitor cells both in bone marrow aspirated (BM) and bone (BMB), suggesting that f-CIMF and PPMF may represent late stages of the disease in which hematopoietic cells have been progressively replaced with fibroblasts. Fibroblast precursors (CFU-F) were much lower in BM than in BMB (treated with flushing and trypsinization) in all group of patients even though these findings may be related to sampling artifacts. In any case, in both BM and BMB, CFU-F increased from p-CIMF to f-CIMF, suggesting an active progression on myelofibrosis; on the contrast, BMB CFU-F significantly decrease from PV to PPMF, indicating a progressive exhaustion of the fibroblast precursors. Moreover, MVD performed in a larger group of patients (n=50) showed higher median values than normal controls, particularly evident in PPMF, where an inverse correlation between fibrosis and angiogenesis was observed. These data suggest that f-CIMF and PPMF could be the fibrotic exit of two distinct MPDs, respectively p-CIMF and PV, indicating that the ethiopatogenesis of the two diseases may be intrinsically different. In conclusion, our “in vitro” data support the WHO classification and may have diagnostic and clinical relevance. Table 1 WHO Classification CD34+ PB cells/μl CFU-GM 5X10e5 cells (BM) CFU-GM 5X10e5 cells (BMB) CFU-F 1X10e6 cells (BM) CFU-F 1X10e6 cells (BMB) MVD (vessels number) Median (Range) p-CIMF (7pt) 110 (1.16–378) 75.5 (65–86) 12 (2–22) 1 (1–15) 67.5 (0–113) 30 (26–43) f-CIMF (3pt) 42 (15–165) 59 (40–60) nd 18 (18–32) 176 (27–325) 24 (20–44.6) PV (3pt) 393 (110–676) 41.5 (18–65) 111.5 (76–147) 12.5 (1–24) 167.5 (86–249) 18.6 (7.3–33) PPMF (7pt) 178 (0.04–376) 19 (10–28) 10 (0–81) 0 (2–4) 36 (10–214) 33.8 (15–40) Controls &lt;1 100 (60–120) nd 44 (18–78) 66 (40–108) 6.6 (4.6–16.3)


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1652-1652
Author(s):  
Patrick Ziegler ◽  
Steffen Boettcher ◽  
Hildegard Keppeler ◽  
Bettina Kirchner ◽  
Markus G. Manz

Abstract We recently demonstrated human T cell, B cell, dendritic cell, and natural interferon producing cell development and consecutive formation of primary and secondary lymphoid organs in Rag2−/−gc−/− mice, transplanted as newborns intra-hepatically (i.h.) with human CD34+ cord blood cells (Traggiai et al., Science 2004). Although these mice support high levels of human cell engraftment and continuous T and B cell formation as well as CD34+ cell maintenance in bone marrow over at least six month, the frequency of secondary recipient reconstituting human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells within the CD34+ pool declines over time. Also, although some human immune responses are detectable upon vaccination with tetanus toxoid, or infection with human lymphotropic viruses such as EBV and HIV, these responses are somewhat weak compared to primary human responses, and are inconsistent in frequency. Thus, some factors sustaining human hematopoietic stem cells in bone marrow and immune responses in lymphoid tissues are either missing in the mouse environment, or are not cross-reactive on human cells. Human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) replicate as undifferentiated cells and are capable to differentiate to multiple mesenchymal tissues such as bone, cartilage, fat, muscle, tendon, as well as marrow and lymphoid organ stroma cells, at least in vitro (e.g. Pittenger et al., Science 1999). Moreover, it was shown that MSCs maintain CD34+ cells to some extend in vitro, and engraft at low frequency upon transplantation into adult immunodeficient mice or fetal sheep as detected by gene transcripts. We thus postulated that co-transplantation of cord blood CD34+ cells and MSCs into newborn mice might lead to engraftment of both cell types, and to provision of factors supporting CD34+ maintenance and immune system function. MSCs were isolated and expanded by plastic adherence in IMDM, supplemented with FCS and cortisone (first 3 weeks) from adult bone marrow, cord blood, and umbilical vein. To test their potential to support hemato-lymphopoiesis, MSCs were analyzed for human hemato-lymphotropic cytokine transcription and production by RT-PCR and ELISA, respectively. MSCs from all sources expressed gene-transcripts for IL-6, IL-7, IL-11, IL-15, SCF, TPO, FLT3L, M-CSF, GM-CSF, LIF, and SDF-1. Consistently, respective cytokines were detected in supernatants at the following, declining levels (pg/ml): IL-6 (10000-10E6) > SDF-1 > IL-11 > M-CSF > IL-7 > LIF > SCF > GM-CSF (0–450), while FLT3L and TPO were not detectable by ELISA. Upon i.h. transplantation of same passage MSCs (1X10E6) into sublethally irradiated (2x2 Gy) newborn Rag2−/−gc−/− mice, 2-week engraftment was demonstrated by species specific b2m-RT-PCR in thymus, spleen, lung, liver and heart in n=7 and additionally in thymus in n=3 out of 13 animals analyzed. Equally, GFP-RNA transcripts were detectable in the thymus for up to 6 weeks, the longest time followed, upon co-transplantation of same source CD34+ cells and retrovirally GFP-transduced MSCs in n=2 out of 4 animals. Further engraftment analysis of ongoing experiments will be presented. Overall, these results demonstrate that human MSC produce hemato-lymphoid cytokines and engraft in newborn transplanted Rag2−/−gc−/− mice, at least at early time-points analyzed. This model thus might allow studying hematopoietic cell and MSC-derived cell interaction, and might serve as a testing system for MSC delivered gene therapy in vivo.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2322-2322
Author(s):  
Takashi Yoshikubo ◽  
Yoshihiro Matsumoto ◽  
Masahiko Nanami ◽  
Takayuki Sakurai ◽  
Hiroyuki Tsunoda ◽  
...  

Abstract Thrombopoietin (TPO, the ligand for c-mpl) is a key factor for megakaryopoiesis. Several clinical trials of TPO have been conducted for thrombocytopenia without much success due to, in part, the production of neutralized antibodies against endogenous TPO, which causes thrombocytopenia. To overcome this problem, we previously demonstrated that mouse type minibody against c-mpl, with an amino acid sequence totally different from TPO, showed megakaryopoiesis and increased platelet numbers in monkey. This time, using CDR grafting, we generated a humanized sc(Fv)2VB22B minibody (huVB22B) against c-mpl for therapeutic use. The new minibody showed almost the same activity in vitro as TPO and the mouse type minibody, confirmed by both a human megakaryocyte cell (CD41+) differentiation assay and a proliferation assay with TPO-dependent cell line, M-07e. Single sc or iv administration of huVB22B to cynomolgus monkeys showed a dose-dependent increase in platelet numbers. Pharmacokinetic analysis showed that the plasma half-life (T1/2) of huVB22B at iv and sc administration to cynomolgus monkeys was 7–8 h and 11–16 h, respectively. After administration of huVB22B, the platelets of these monkeys increased and showed functional aggregation in response to ADP in vitro. Repeated administration of huVB22B (0.2, 2 and 20mg/kg/week) revealed that the increase in platelet level in cynomolgus monkeys was maintained for a month. Very slight reticular fibers in bone marrow were detected in a high dose group (20mg/ kg). No overt changes were detected by toxicity evaluations including clinical pathology and histopathology in 0.2 and 2mg/kg groups. No neutralized activities in plasma were observed during these experiments. Next, we examined the activities of huVB22B on human bone marrow-derived CD34-positive cells (BM-CD34+) and umbilical cord blood-derived CD34-positive cells (UCB-CD34+) in vitro. BM-CD34+ and UCB-CD34+ cells were cultured with huVB22B in serum free medium. HuVB22B induced differentiation of CD41+ cells from BM-CD34+ or UCB-CD34+ cells in a similar dose-dependent manner. However, UCB-CD34+ cells showed greater proliferation in response to huVB22B compared to BM-CD34+ cells. We then examined the in vivo activities of huVB22B on UCB CD34+ cells by treating NOD/SCID mice transplanted with human UCB-CD34+ cells with huVB22B and examining the bone marrow cells of the mice. The results showed that, compared with the control, administration of huVB22B showed an increase in the number of human hematopoietic progenitor cells (CD34+), lymphoid lineage cells (CD19+), and myeloid lineage cells (CD33+) in addition to human CFU-Meg cells (CD41+). These results suggest that c-mpl stimulation in vivo after transplantation might increase engraftment of progenitor cells in the bone marrow microenvironment and subsequently induce differentiation to multilineage cells. Umbilical cord blood transplantation faces frequent complications including a low-level stem/progenitor cell engraftment and delayed platelet recovery. Our results suggest that c-mpl stimulation might be used to increase the engraftment of UCB stem/progenitor cells and shorten the time of platelet recovery following UCB transplantation.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 18-18
Author(s):  
Muithi Mwanthi ◽  
Gracie Michels ◽  
Karl Staser ◽  
Sarita Sehra ◽  
Michal Jander ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 18 Eosinophils are increasingly recognized as important myeloid effector cells in the inflammatory environment of many human diseases. Although eosinophils critically contribute to chronic asthmatic inflammation, few therapies directly target these cells. Eosinophils rapidly migrate to eotaxin elicited by allergic sensitization and challenge, a chemokine that ligates the CCR3 receptor. Eotaxin:CCR3 signaling critically regulates allergen-induced eosinophil infiltration in murine models by activating the Rho-family proteins. In several cell systems, the Rho proteins Rac and CDC42 activate p21-activated kinase 1 (PAK1), which we have previously shown to regulate F-actin dynamics and histamine release in the degranulating mast cell. In these studies, we examined eotaxin-induced eosinophil migration using genetic and hematopoietic ablation of Pak1 (Pak1−/−) in a murine asthma model. Using an in vitro transwell migration assay system, we evaluated the migration of bone marrow derived eosinophils of both genotypes to eotaxin (N=10). Pak1−/− eosinophils exhibited profoundly diminished eotaxin-induced chemotaxis in vitro relative to wild-type (Pak1+/+) eosinophils (p < 0.0001) with a 30% overall decrease in migrating Pak1−/− compared to Pak1+/+ eosinophils. Furthermore, we compared the eotaxin-induced localization and arrangement of F-actin in eosinophils of both genotypes by fluorescence cytometry and deconvolution confocal microscopy of fluorescently-tagged phalloidin in seeking to explain this migration defect. Preliminary findings suggest decreased F-actin polymerization in eotaxin-treated Pak1−/− eosinophils. In an independent line of experiments designed to compare eotaxin-mediated eosinophil recruitment in vivo we injected mice of both genotypes with an intraperitoneal dose of eotaxin or saline. Pak1+/+ mice showed an 8 fold eotaxin-mediated increase in eosinophil recruitment over control whereas Pak1−/− mice demonstrated only a modest 3–4 fold increase (p< 0.05). Finally we pursued PAK1's function in an experimental disease model in which the eosinophil's key role in pathogenesis is well documented. In 3 cohorts of 7 age, gender and strain matched Pak1+/+ and Pak1−/− ova albumin (OVA)-sensitized and challenged mice, we scored lung eosinophilic inflammation by histology and compared eosinophil counts and eotaxin concentrations in broncho-alveolar lavage fluid (BALF) by fluorescence cytometry and ELISA respectively. We also assessed OVA-specific T-cell subset cytokine secretion in our asthma mice by ELISA. Lung-parenchymal eosinophilic inflammation was diminished in Pak1−/− ova-sensitized mice versus Pak1+/+'s (p<0.01) with neither differences in BALF eotaxin content nor OVA-specific in vitro T-helper cell secretion of asthma-induced cytokines between the 2 genotypes. Based on our findings in this model, we assessed PAK1's hematopoietic role using two complementary chimeric mouse models. In a cohort of matched recipient Pak1+/+ mice we transplanted Pak1+/+ and Pak1−/− bone marrow and after hematopoietic reconstitution we incited asthmatic inflammation in these mice. Significantly, hosts transplanted with Pak1−/− bone marrow developed decreased eosinophilic inflammation scores compared to Pak1+/+ bone marrow recipients (p<0.05). To complement the bone marrow experiments, we transplanted left-lung grafts from Pak1+/+ and Pak1−/− mice into matched Pak1+/+ and Pak1−/− recipient mice and after surgical recuperation we elicited asthmatic inflammation as above. Similar to our bone marrow transplant experiments, irrespective of the genotype of the lung graft, hosts with Pak1−/− bone marrow developed decreased lung eosinophil infiltrate. Our data suggest that genetic PAK1 disruption hinders the in vitro and in vivo eotaxin-mediated migration of eosinophils by altering polymerization of F-actin. In an OVA murine model of asthma, we show that the genetic ablation of PAK1 attenuates the eosinophilic inflammation without affecting T-cell function. We similarly demonstrate that hematopoietic expression of PAK1 is critical to the development of eosinophil inflammation in two complementary transplant murine models. Pharmacologically targeting PAK1 may thus provide a specific way to impede eosinophil tissue infiltration, alleviate chronic eosinophil inflammation, and hamper long-term tissue remodeling in diseases like asthma. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1999-1999
Author(s):  
Annie L. Oh ◽  
Dolores Mahmud ◽  
Benedetta Nicolini ◽  
Nadim Mahmud ◽  
Elisa Bonetti ◽  
...  

Abstract Our previous studies have shown the ability of human CD34+ cells to stimulate T cell alloproliferative responses in-vitro. Here, we investigated anti-CD34 T cell alloreactivity in-vivo by co-transplanting human CD34+ cells and allogeneic T cells of an incompatible individual into NSG mice. Human CD34+ cells (2x105/animal) were transplanted with allogeneic T cells at different ratios ranging from 1:50 to 1:0.5, or without T cells as a control. No xenogeneic GVHD was detected at 1:1 CD34:T cell ratio. Engraftment of human CD45+ (huCD45+) cells in mice marrow and spleen was analyzed by flow cytometry. Marrow engraftment of huCD45+ cells at 4 or 8 weeks was significantly decreased in mice transplanted with T cells compared to control mice that did not receive T cells. More importantly, transplantation of T cells at CD34:T cell ratios from 1:50 to 1:0.5 resulted in stem cell rejection since >98% huCD45+ cells detected were CD3+. In mice with stem cell rejection, human T cells had a normal CD4:CD8 ratio and CD4+ cells were mostly CD45RA+. The kinetics of human cell engraftment in the bone marrow and spleen was then analyzed in mice transplanted with CD34+ and allogeneic T cells at 1:1 ratio and sacrificed at 1, 2, or 4 weeks. At 2 weeks post transplant, the bone marrow showed CD34-derived myeloid cells, whereas the spleen showed only allo-T cells. At 4 weeks, all myeloid cells had been rejected and only T cells were detected both in the bone marrow and spleen. Based on our previous in-vitro studies showing that T cell alloreactivity against CD34+ cells is mainly due to B7:CD28 costimulatory activation, we injected the mice with CTLA4-Ig (Abatacept, Bristol Myers Squibb, New York, NY) from d-1 to d+28 post transplantation of CD34+ and allogeneic T cells. Treatment of mice with CTLA4-Ig prevented rejection and allowed CD34+ cells to fully engraft the marrow of NSG mice at 4 weeks with an overall 13± 7% engraftment of huCD45+ marrow cells (n=5) which included: 53±9% CD33+ cells, 22±3% CD14+ monocytes, 7±2% CD1c myeloid dendritic cells, and 4±1% CD34+ cells, while CD19+ B cells were only 3±1% and CD3+ T cells were 0.5±1%. We hypothesize that CTLA4-Ig may induce the apoptotic deletion of alloreactive T cells early in the post transplant period although we could not detect T cells in the spleen as early as 7 or 10 days after transplant. Here we demonstrate that costimulatory blockade with CTLA4-Ig at the time of transplant of human CD34+ cells and incompatible allogeneic T cells can prevent T cell mediated rejection. We also show that the NSG model can be utilized to test immunotherapy strategies aimed at engrafting human stem cells across HLA barriers in-vivo. These results will prompt the design of future clinical trials of CD34+ cell transplantation for patients with severe non-malignant disorders, such as sickle cell anemia, thalassemia, immunodeficiencies or aplastic anemia. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 1192-1192
Author(s):  
Hirotaka Kawano ◽  
Tomotoshi Marumoto ◽  
Takafumi Hiramoto ◽  
Michiyo Okada ◽  
Tomoko Inoue ◽  
...  

Abstract Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation is the most successful cellular therapy for the malignant hematopoietic diseases such as leukemia, and early recovery of host’s hematopoiesis after HSC transplantation has eagerly been expected to reduce the regimen related toxicity for many years. For the establishment of the safer and more efficient cell source for allogeneic or autologous HSC transplantation, HSCs differentiated from embryonic stem cells (ESCs) or induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) that show indefinite proliferation in an undifferentiated state and pluripotency, are considered to be one of the best candidates. Unfortunately, despite many recent efforts, the HSC-specific differentiation from ESCs and iPSCs remains poor [Kaufman, DS et al., 2001][Ledran MH et al., 2008]. In this study, we developed the new method to differentiate HSC from non-human primate ESC/iPSC. It has been reported that common marmoset (CM), a non-human primate, is a suitable experimental animal for the preclinical studies of HSC therapy [Hibino H et al., 1999]. We have been investigated the hematopoietic differentiation of CM ESCs into HSCs, and previously reported that the induction of CD34+ cells having a blood colony forming capacity from CM ESCs were promoted by lentiviral transduction of TAL1 cDNA [Kurita R et al., 2006]. However, those CD34+ cells did not have a bone marrow reconstituting ability in irradiated NOG (NOD/Shi-scid/IL-2Rγnull) mice, suggesting that transduction of TAL1 gene was not sufficient to induce functional HSCs which have self-renewal capability and multipotency. Thus, we tried to find other hematopoietic genes being able to promote hematopoietic differetiation more efficiently than TAL1. We selected 6 genes (LYL1, HOXB4, BMI1, GATA2, c-MYB and LMO2) as candidates for factors that induce the differentiation of ESCs into HSCs, based on the previous study of hematopoietic differentiation from human and mouse ESCs. And CM ESCs (Cj11) lentivirally transduced with the respective candidate gene were processed for embryoid body (EB) formation to induce their differentiation into HSCs for 9 days. We found that lentiviral transduction of LYL1 (lymphoblastic leukemia 1), a basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor, in EBs markedly increased the proportion of cells positive for CD34 (approximately 20% of LYL1-transduced cells). RT-PCR showed that LYL1-transduced EBs expressed various hematopoietic genes, such as TAL1, RUNX1 and c-KIT. To examine whether these CD34+ cells have the ability to differentiate into hematopoietic cells in vitro, we performed colony-forming unit (CFU) assay, and found that CD34+ cells in LYL1-transduced EBs could form multi-lineage blood colonies. Furthermore the number of blood colonies originated from CD34+CD45+ cells in LYL1-transduced EBs was almost the same as that from CD34+CD45+ cells derived from CM bone marrow. These results suggested that enforced expression of LYL1 in CM ESCs promoted the emergence of HSCs by EB formation in vitro. The LYL1 was originally identified as the factor of a chromosomal translocation, resulting in T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia [Mellentin JD et al., 1989]. The Lyl1-deficient mice display the reduction of B cells and impaired long-term hematopoietic reconstitution capacity [Capron C et al., 2006]. And, transduction of Lyl1 in mouse bone marrow cells induced the increase of HSCs and lymphocytes in vitro and in vivo [Lukov GL et al., 2011]. Therefore we hypothesized that LYL1 may play essential roles in bone marrow reconstitution by HSCs differentiated from CM ESCs. To examine this, we transplanted CD34+ cells derived from LYL1-transduced CM ESCs into bone marrow of sublethally irradiated NOG mice, and found that about 7% of CD45+ cells derived from CM ESCs were detected in peripheral blood (PB) of recipient mice at 8 weeks after transplant (n=4). Although CM CD45+ cells disappeared at 12 weeks after transplant, CD34+ cells (about 3%) were still found in bone marrow at the same time point. Given that TAL1-transduced EBs derived from CM ESCs could not reconstitute bone marrow of irradiated mice at all, LYL1 rather than TAL1 might be a more appropriate transcription factor that can give rise to CD34+ HSCs having the enhanced capability of bone marrow reconstitution from CM ESCs. We are planning to do in vivo study to prove this hypothesis in CM. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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