Clonal analysis of thymus-repopulating cells presents direct evidence for self-renewal division of human hematopoietic stem cells

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (7) ◽  
pp. 2446-2454 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Yahata ◽  
Shizu Yumino ◽  
Yin Seng ◽  
Hiroko Miyatake ◽  
Tomoko Uno ◽  
...  

Abstract To elucidate the in vivo kinetics of human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), CD34+CD38– cells were infected with lentivirus vector and transplanted into immunodeficient mice. We analyzed the multilineage differentiation and self-renewal abilities of individual thymus-repopulating clones in primary recipients, and their descending clones in paired secondary recipients, by tracing lentivirus gene integration sites in each lymphomyeloid progeny using a linear amplification-mediated polymerase chain reaction (PCR) strategy. Our clonal analysis revealed that a single human thymus-repopulating cell had the ability to produce lymphoid and myeloid lineage cells in the primary recipient and each secondary recipient, indicating that individual human HSCs expand clonally by self-renewal division. Furthermore, we found that the proportion of HSC clones present in the CD34+ cell population decreased as HSCs replicated during extensive repopulation and also as the differentiation capacity of the HSC clones became limited. This indicates the restriction of the ability of individual HSCs despite the expansion of total HSC population. We also demonstrated that the extensive self-renewal potential was confined in the relatively small proportion of HSC clones. We conclude that our clonal tracking studies clearly demonstrated that heterogeneity in the self-renewal capacity of HSC clones underlies the differences in clonal longevity in the CD34+ stem cell pool.

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2309-2309
Author(s):  
Jian Huang ◽  
Peter S. Klein

Abstract Abstract 2309 Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) maintain the ability to self-renew and to differentiate into all lineages of the blood. The signaling pathways regulating hematopoietic stem cell (HSCs) self-renewal and differentiation are not well understood. We are very interested in understanding the roles of glycogen synthase kinase-3 (Gsk3) and the signaling pathways regulated by Gsk3 in HSCs. In our previous study (Journal of Clinical Investigation, December 2009) using loss of function approaches (inhibitors, RNAi, and knockout) in mice, we found that Gsk3 plays a pivotal role in controlling the decision between self-renewal and differentiation of HSCs. Disruption of Gsk3 in bone marrow transiently expands HSCs in a b-catenin dependent manner, consistent with a role for Wnt signaling. However, in long-term repopulation assays, disruption of Gsk3 progressively depletes HSCs through activation of mTOR. This long-term HSC depletion is prevented by mTOR inhibition and exacerbated by b-catenin knockout. Thus GSK3 regulates both Wnt and mTOR signaling in HSCs, with opposing effects on HSC self-renewal such that inhibition of Gsk3 in the presence of rapamycin expands the HSC pool in vivo. In the current study, we found that suppression of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway, an established nutrient sensor, combined with activation of canonical Wnt/ß-catenin signaling, allows the ex vivo maintenance of human and mouse long-term HSCs under cytokine-free conditions. We also show that combining two clinically approved medications that activate Wnt/ß-catenin signaling and inhibit mTOR increases the number of long-term HSCs in vivo. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 1447-1456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Lu ◽  
Agnieszka Czechowicz ◽  
Jun Seita ◽  
Du Jiang ◽  
Irving L. Weissman

While the aggregate differentiation of the hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) population has been extensively studied, little is known about the lineage commitment process of individual HSC clones. Here, we provide lineage commitment maps of HSC clones under homeostasis and after perturbations of the endogenous hematopoietic system. Under homeostasis, all donor-derived HSC clones regenerate blood homogeneously throughout all measured stages and lineages of hematopoiesis. In contrast, after the hematopoietic system has been perturbed by irradiation or by an antagonistic anti-ckit antibody, only a small fraction of donor-derived HSC clones differentiate. Some of these clones dominantly expand and exhibit lineage bias. We identified the cellular origins of clonal dominance and lineage bias and uncovered the lineage commitment pathways that lead HSC clones to different levels of self-renewal and blood production under various transplantation conditions. This study reveals surprising alterations in HSC fate decisions directed by conditioning and identifies the key hematopoiesis stages that may be manipulated to control blood production and balance.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 115 (18) ◽  
pp. 3704-3707 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faiyaz Notta ◽  
Sergei Doulatov ◽  
John E. Dick

Abstract Repopulation of immunodeficient mice remains the primary method to assay human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Here we report that female NOD/SCID/IL-2Rgc-null mice are far superior in detecting human HSCs (Lin−CD34+CD38−CD90+CD45RA−) compared with male recipients. When multiple HSCs were transplanted, female recipients displayed a trend (1.4-fold) toward higher levels of human chimerism (female vs male: injected femur, 44.4 ± 9.3 vs 32.2 ± 6.2; n = 12 females, n = 24 males; P = .1). Strikingly, this effect was dramatically amplified at limiting cell doses where female recipients had an approximately 11-fold higher chimerism from single HSCs (female vs male: injected femur, 8.1 ± 2.7 vs 0.7 ± 0.7; n = 28 females, n = 20 males; P < .001). Secondary transplantations from primary recipients indicate that females more efficiently support the self-renewal of human HSCs. Therefore, sex-associated factors play a pivotal role in the survival, proliferation, and self-renewal of human HSCs in the xenograft model, and recipient sex must be carefully monitored in the future design of experiments requiring human HSC assays.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 405-405
Author(s):  
Kenichi Miharada ◽  
Göran Karlsson ◽  
Jonas Larsson ◽  
Emma Larsson ◽  
Kavitha Siva ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 405 Cripto is a member of the EGF-CFC soluble protein family and has been identified as an important factor for the proliferation/self-renewal of ES and several types of tumor cells. The role for Cripto in the regulation of hematopoietic cells has been unknown. Here we show that Cripto is a potential new candidate factor to increase self-renewal and expand hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in vitro. The expression level of Cripto was analyzed by qRT-PCR in several purified murine hematopoietic cell populations. The findings demonstrated that purified CD34-KSL cells, known as highly concentrated HSC population, had higher expression levels than other hematopoietic progenitor populations including CD34+KSL cells. We asked how Cripto regulates HSCs by using recombinant mouse Cripto (rmCripto) for in vitro and in vivo experiments. First we tested the effects of rmCripto on purified hematopoietic stem cells (CD34-LSK) in vitro. After two weeks culture in serum free media supplemented with 100ng/ml of SCF, TPO and 500ng/ml of rmCripto, 30 of CD34-KSL cells formed over 1,300 of colonies, including over 60 of GEMM colonies, while control cultures without rmCripto generated few colonies and no GEMM colonies (p<0.001). Next, 20 of CD34-KSL cells were cultured with or without rmCripto for 2 weeks and transplanted to lethally irradiated mice in a competitive setting. Cripto treated donor cells showed a low level of reconstitution (4–12%) in the peripheral blood, while cells cultured without rmCripto failed to reconstitute. To define the target population and the mechanism of Cripto action, we analyzed two cell surface proteins, GRP78 and Glypican-1, as potential receptor candidates for Cripto regulation of HSC. Surprisingly, CD34-KSL cells were divided into two distinct populations where HSC expressing GRP78 exhibited robust expansion of CFU-GEMM progenitor mediated by rmCripto in CFU-assay whereas GRP78- HSC did not respond (1/3 of CD34-KSL cells were GRP78+). Furthermore, a neutralization antibody for GRP78 completely inhibited the effect of Cripto in both CFU-assay and transplantation assay. In contrast, all lineage negative cells were Glypican-1 positive. These results suggest that GRP78 must be the functional receptor for Cripto on HSC. We therefore sorted these two GRP78+CD34-KSL (GRP78+HSC) and GRP78-CD34-KSL (GRP78-HSC) populations and transplanted to lethally irradiated mice using freshly isolated cells and cells cultured with or without rmCripto for 2 weeks. Interestingly, fresh GRP78-HSCs showed higher reconstitution than GRP78+HSCs (58–82% and 8–40%, p=0.0038) and the reconstitution level in peripheral blood increased rapidly. In contrast, GRP78+HSC reconstituted the peripheral blood slowly, still at a lower level than GRP78-HSC 4 months after transplantation. However, rmCripto selectively expanded (or maintained) GRP78+HSCs but not GRP78-HSCs after culture and generated a similar level of reconstitution as freshly transplanted cells (12–35%). Finally, bone marrow cells of engrafted recipient mice were analyzed at 5 months after transplantation. Surprisingly, GRP78+HSC cultured with rmCripto showed higher reconstitution of the CD34-KSL population in the recipients' bone marrow (45–54%, p=0.0026), while the reconstitution in peripheral blood and in total bone marrow was almost the same. Additionally, most reconstituted CD34-KSL population was GRP78+. Interestingly freshly transplanted sorted GRP78+HSC and GRP78-HSC can produce the GRP78− and GRP78+ populations in the bone marrow and the ratio of GRP78+/− cells that were regenerated have the same proportion as the original donor mice. Compared to cultured cells, the level of reconstitution (peripheral blood, total bone marrow, HSC) in the recipient mice was almost similar. These results indicate that the GRP78 expression on HSC is reversible, but it seems to be “fixed” into an immature stage and differentiate with lower efficiency toward mature cells after long/strong exposure to Cripto signaling. Based on these findings, we propose that Cripto is a novel factor that maintains HSC in an immature state and may be a potent candidate for expansion of a distinct population of GRP78 expressing HSC. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Hematology ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mickie Bhatia

Abstract The most common human cell-based therapy applied today is hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation. HSCs can be defined by two essential properties: self-renewal and multilineage hematopoietic differentiation. These combined HSC properties allow them to differentiate into all blood cell types (multilineage) in a sustained manner for the lifetime of the animal, which requires their ability to make cellular copies of themselves (self-renewal). These features can be tested by transplantation from donor to recipient and provide a functional basis to define and identify HSCs. Currently, human bone marrow (BM), mobilized peripheral blood, and umbilical cord blood (CB) represent the major sources of transplantable HSCs, but their availability for use is limited by both quantity and compatibility. Although increasing evidence suggests that somatic HSCs can be expanded to meet current needs, their in vivo potential is concomitantly compromised after ex vivo culture. Pluripotent human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) may provide an alternative. hESCs possess indefinite proliferative capacity in vitro, and have been shown to differentiate into the hematopoietic cell fate, giving rise to erythroid, myeloid, and lymphoid lineages using a variety of differentiation procedures. In most cases, hESC-derived hematopoietic cells show similar clonogenic progenitor capacity and primitive phenotype to somatic sources of hematopoietic progenitors, but possess limited in vivo repopulating capacity when transplanted into immunodeficient mice. Although this suggests HSC function can be derived from hESCs, the efficiency and quality of these cells must be characterized using surrogate models for potential clinical applications.


Author(s):  
Ruzhica Bogeska ◽  
Paul Kaschutnig ◽  
Malak Fawaz ◽  
Ana-Matea Mikecin ◽  
Marleen Büchler-Schäff ◽  
...  

AbstractHematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are canonically defined by their capacity to maintain the HSC pool via self-renewal divisions. However, accumulating evidence suggests that HSC function is instead preserved by sustaining long-term quiescence. Here, we study the kinetics of HSC recovery in mice, following an inflammatory challenge that induces HSCs to exit dormancy. Repeated inflammatory challenge resulted in a progressive depletion of functional HSCs, with no sign of later recovery. Underlying this observation, label retention experiments demonstrated that self-renewal divisions were absent or extremely rare during challenge, as well as during any subsequent recovery period. While depletion of functional HSCs held no immediate consequences, young mice exposed to inflammatory challenge developed blood and bone marrow hypocellularity in old age, similar to elderly humans. The progressive, irreversible attrition of HSC function demonstrates that discreet instances of inflammatory stress can have an irreversible and therefore cumulative impact on HSC function, even when separated by several months. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the role of inflammation as a mediator of dysfunctional tissue maintenance and regeneration during ageing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (15) ◽  
pp. 2355-2367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yueh-Chwen Hsu ◽  
Tsung-Chih Chen ◽  
Chien-Chin Lin ◽  
Chang-Tsu Yuan ◽  
Chia-Lang Hsu ◽  
...  

Abstract Plant homeodomain finger gene 6 (PHF6) encodes a 365-amino-acid protein containing 2 plant homology domain fingers. Germline mutations of human PHF6 cause Börjeson-Forssman-Lehmann syndrome, a congenital neurodevelopmental disorder. Loss-of-function mutations of PHF6 are detected in patients with acute leukemia, mainly of T-cell lineage and in a small proportion of myeloid lineage. The functions of PHF6 in physiological hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis remain incompletely defined. To address this question, we generated a conditional Phf6 knockout mouse model and investigated the impact of Phf6 loss on the hematopoietic system. We found that Phf6 knockout mice at 8 weeks of age had reduced numbers of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in the peripheral blood compared with the wild-type littermates. There were decreased granulocyte-monocytic progenitors but increased Lin–c-Kit+Sca-1+ cells in the marrow of young Phf6 knockout mice. Functional studies, including competitive repopulation unit and serial transplantation assays, revealed an enhanced reconstitution and self-renewal capacity in Phf6 knockout hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Aged Phf6 knockout mice had myelodysplasia-like presentations, including decreased platelet counts, megakaryocyte dysplasia, and enlarged spleen related to extramedullary hematopoiesis. Moreover, we found that Phf6 loss lowered the threshold of NOTCH1-induced leukemic transformation at least partially through increased leukemia-initiating cells. Transcriptome analysis on the restrictive rare HSC subpopulations revealed upregulated cell cycling and oncogenic functions, with alteration of key gene expression in those pathways. In summary, our studies show the in vivo crucial roles of Phf6 in physiological and malignant hematopoiesis.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taro Ishigaki ◽  
Kazuhiro Sudo ◽  
Takashi Hiroyama ◽  
Kenichi Miharada ◽  
Haruhiko Ninomiya ◽  
...  

We previously reported that long-lasting in vitro hematopoiesis could be achieved using the cells differentiated from primate embryonic stem (ES) cells. Thus, we speculated that hematopoietic stem cells differentiated from ES cells could sustain long-lasting in vitro hematopoiesis. To test this hypothesis, we investigated whether human hematopoietic stem cells could similarly sustain long-lasting in vitro hematopoiesis in the same culture system. Although the results varied between experiments, presumably due to differences in the quality of each hematopoietic stem cell sample, long-lasting in vitro hematopoiesis was observed to last up to nine months. Furthermore, an in vivo analysis in which cultured cells were transplanted into immunodeficient mice indicated that even after several months of culture, hematopoietic stem cells were still present in the cultured cells. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report to show that human hematopoietic stem cells can survive in vitro for several months.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1349-1349
Author(s):  
Emmanuelle Passegue ◽  
Amy J. Wagers ◽  
Sylvie Giuriato ◽  
Wade C. Anderson ◽  
Irving L. Weissman

Abstract The blood is a perpetually renewing tissue seeded by a rare population of adult bone marrow hematopoietic stem cells (HSC). During steady-state hematopoiesis, the HSC population is relatively quiescent but constantly maintains a low numbers of cycling cells that differentiate to produce the various lineage of mature blood cells. However, in response to hematological stress, the entire HSC population can be recruited into cycle to self-renew and regenerate the blood-forming system. HSC proliferation is therefore highly adaptative and requires appropriate regulation of cell cycle progression to drive both differentiation-associated and self-renewal-associated proliferation, without depletion of the stem cell pool. Although the molecular events controlling HSC proliferation are still poorly understood, they are likely determined, at least in part, by regulated expression and/or function of components and regulators of the cell cycle machinery. Here, we demonstrate that the long-term self-renewing HSC (defined as Lin−/c-Kit+/Sca-1+/Thy1.1int/Flk2−) exists in two distinct states that are both equally important for their in vivo functions as stem cells: a numerically dominant quiescent state, which is critical for HSC function in hematopoietic reconstitution; and a proliferative state, which represents almost a fourth of this population and is essential for HSC functions in differentiation and self-renewal. We show that when HSC exit quiescence and enter G1 as a prelude to cell division, at least two critical events occur: first, during the G1 and subsequent S-G2/M phases, they temporarily lose efficient in vivo engraftment activity, while retaining in vitro differentiation potential; and second, they select the particular cell cycle proteins that are associated with specific developmental outcomes (self-renewal vs. differentiation) and developmental fates (myeloid vs. lymphoid). Together, these findings provide a direct link between HSC proliferation, cell cycle regulation and cell fate decisions that have critical implications for both the therapeutic use of HSC and the understanding of leukemic transformation.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 45-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael R. Copley ◽  
David G. Kent ◽  
Claudia Benz ◽  
Stefan Wohrer ◽  
Keegan M. Rowe ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 45 Fetal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in mice differ from their adult counterparts in a number of key properties. These include a higher cycling activity, an ability to more rapidly reconstitute the HSC compartment of irradiated recipient mice, a higher output of myeloid as compared to lymphoid progeny, and a greater sensitivity to the self-renewal promoting activity of Steel factor. We have previously shown that most of these features of fetal HSCs are sustained until 3 weeks after birth at which time they are rapidly (within 1 week), completely and permanently replaced with the corresponding properties of adult HSCs. A candidate regulator of this transition, Hmga2, was identified based on its greater expression in highly purified fetal versus adult HSCs (CD45+EPCR+CD48−CD150+; E-SLAM cells) with persistence of this difference in the matching lineage-negative (lin−) compartments. Experiments in which Hmga2 was overexpressed by lentiviral transduction of purified adult HSCs which were then transplanted into irradiated mice provided evidence that this chromatin remodeling factor can activate a fetal-like HSC program in these cells; i.e., more rapidly reconstitute the HSC compartment (increased self-renewal response) and produce clones with a higher proportion of myeloid cells. Based on the known ability of the let-7 family of microRNAs (miRNAs) to target Hmga2 transcripts resulting in their degradation and/or translational repression, we next hypothesized that let-7 miRNAs might be involved in controlling HSC developmental programs. A comparison of the levels of expression of 6 members of the let-7 family in purified fetal and adult HSCs, as well as in lin− hematopoietic cells, showed that transcripts for all of these are higher in the adult subsets, although this difference was significant only for let-7b (p<0.05). Since Lin28 is a natural inhibitor of let-7 miRNA biogenesis we proposed that overexpression of this protein might be used to simultaneously inhibit all let-7 miRNA species and therefore modulate let-7-mediated effects in HSCs. Transduction of BA/F3 cells with a Lin28-YFP lentiviral vector led to an elevated expression of Lin28 and a significant decrease in multiple let-7 miRNAs. To investigate the influence of Lin28 overexpression on adult HSC self-renewal activity in vivo, we used the same Lin28 lentiviral vector (or a control YFP vector) to transduce highly purified HSCs (40 E-SLAM cells, i.e. ∼20 HSCs/group/experiment, 3 experiments) in a 3–4-hour exposure protocol and then transplanted all of the cells directly into irradiated mice (total of 3–4 mice/group). The number of HSCs regenerated 6 weeks later was subsequently measured by performing limiting-dilution transplants in secondary mice (total of 12–16 secondary mice/group/experiment). Interestingly, analysis of the secondary recipients showed that the Lin28-overexpressing adult HSCs had expanded in the primary recipients ∼6-fold more than the control-virus transduced HSCs (p<0.001). These findings support our thesis that alterations in let-7 miRNA levels play a key role in regulating the developmental switch from fetal to adult HSCs programs that occurs between 3 and 4 weeks after birth in mice. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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