scholarly journals Etoposide-Initiated MLL Rearrangements Detected at High Frequency in Human Primitive Hematopoietic Stem Cells with In Vitro and In Vivo Long-Term Repopulating Potential.

Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 98-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jolanta Libura ◽  
Marueen Ward ◽  
Grzegorz Przybylski ◽  
Christine Richardson

Abstract Rearrangements involving the MLL gene locus at chromosome band 11q23 are observed in therapy-related acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes following treatment with topoisomerase II (topoII) inhibitors including etoposide. We have shown that one hour of etoposide exposure (20–50 μM) stimulates stable MLL rearrangements in primary human CD34+ cells and that the spectrum of repair products within MLL gene is broader than so far described (Libura et al, Blood, 2005). Clinical data suggest that MLL-associated malignant leukemias originate within primitive hematopietic stem cells capable of differentiation into all hematopoietic lineages and repopulation of myelo-ablated hosts. These cells can be analyzed using the in vivo NOD-SCID mouse model as well as the in vitro long-term culture initiating cell (LTC-IC) assay. We adopted our in vitro CD34+ cell culture model to investigate the impact of etoposide exposure on the most primitive hematopoietic stem cells using parallel assays for LTC-IC and NOD-SCID Repopulating Cells (SRC). Following etoposide exposure (20–50 μM for 1 hour), and 48–96 hours recovery in vitro, untreated control and etoposide-treated CD34+ cells were either seeded in LTC-IC with a supportive feeder layer (Stem Cell Technologies, Inc.), or injected into NOD-SCID mice (0.1–1.5x106 cells per mouse). After 12 weeks, both LTC-IC cultures and bone marrow cells from NOD-SCID mice were seeded in methylcellulose media supplemented with growth factors that promote only human cell colony formation. An increased number of colonies in etoposide-treated samples was obtained from LTC-IC cultures in 3 out of 5 experiments (p value<0.05). This increase in colony number was more dramatic in etoposide-treated samples from NOD-SCID bone marrow (57 versus 0, 8 versus 0). These data demonstrate that etoposide exposure can significantly alter the potential of early hematopoietic stem cells to survive and proliferate both in vitro and in vivo. Injection of as few as 3x105 CD34+ cells into a NOD-SCID mouse was sufficient to obtain methylcellulose colonies, suggesting that this method can be used for the analysis of cells obtained from a single patient sample. Mutation analysis of human methylcellulose colonies derived from both LTC-IC and NOD-SCID was performed by inverse PCR and ligation-mediated PCR followed by sequencing. This analysis revealed that rearrangements originating within the MLL breakpoint cluster region (bcr) were present in 12 out of 29 colonies from etoposide-treated samples versus 5 out of 39 colonies from control samples (p value <0.01), demonstrating that etoposide exposure promotes stable rearrangements within a hematopoietic stem cell compartment with significant proliferative potential. Eight of the 17 events were sequenced, and showed 6 MLL tandem duplications within intron 8, one complex translocation between MLL and chr.15 and tandem duplication, and one event with foreign sequence of unknown origin. Our data are the first report of the spectrum and frequency of MLL rearrangements following topo II inhibitor exposure in a cell population thought to be the target for recombinogenic events leading to therapy-related leukemias.

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 502-502
Author(s):  
Marisa M. Juntilla ◽  
Vineet Patil ◽  
Rohan Joshi ◽  
Gary A. Koretzky

Abstract Murine hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) rely on components of the Akt signaling pathway, such as FOXO family members and PTEN, for efficient self-renewal and continued survival. However, it is unknown whether Akt is also required for murine HSC function. We hypothesized that Akt would be required for HSC self-renewal, and that the absence of Akt would lead to hematopoietic failure resulting in developmental defects in multiple lineages. To address the effect of Akt loss in HSCs we used competitive and noncompetitive murine fetal liver-bone marrow chimeras. In short-term assays, Akt1−/−Akt2−/− fetal liver cells reconstituted the LSK compartment of an irradiated host as well or better than wildtype cells, although failed to generate wildtype levels of more differentiated cells in multiple lineages. When placed in a competitive environment, Akt1−/−Akt2−/− HSCs were outcompeted by wildtype HSCs in serial bone marrow transplant assays, indicating a requirement for Akt1 and Akt2 in the maintainance of long-term hematopoietic stem cells. Akt1−/−Akt2−/− LSKs tend to remain in the G0 phase of the cell cycle compared to wildtype LSKs, suggesting the failure in serial transplant assays may be due to increased quiesence in the absence of Akt1 and Akt2. Additionally, the intracellular content of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in HSCs is dependent on Akt signaling because Akt1−/−Akt2−/− HSCs have decreased ROS levels. Furthermore, pharmacologic augmentation of ROS in the absence of Akt1 and Akt2 results in an exit from quiescence and rescue of differentiation both in vivo and in vitro. Together, these data implicate Akt1 and Akt2 as critical regulators of long-term HSC function and suggest that defective ROS homeostasis may contribute to failed hematopoiesis.


Blood ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 100 (12) ◽  
pp. 3975-3982 ◽  
Author(s):  
William B. Slayton ◽  
Ann Georgelas ◽  
L. Jeanne Pierce ◽  
Kojo S. Elenitoba-Johnson ◽  
S. Scott Perry ◽  
...  

The stem cell pool can be fractionated by using the mitochondrial dye, rhodamine-123, into Rholow hematopoietic stem cells and Rhohigh progenitors. Rholow stem cells permanently engraft all lineages, whereas Rhohighprogenitors transiently produce erythrocytes, without substantial platelet or granulocyte production. We hypothesized that the inability of the Rhohigh cells to produce platelets in vivo was due to the fact that these cells preferentially engraft in the spleen and lack marrow engraftment. Initially, we demonstrated that Rhohigh progenitors produced more megakaryocytes in vitro than Rholow stem cells did. To study the activity of the Rholow and Rhohighsubsets in vivo, we used mice allelic at the hemoglobin and glucose phosphate isomerase loci to track donor-derived erythropoiesis and thrombopoiesis. Rholow stem cells contributed to robust and long-term erythroid and platelet engraftment, whereas Rhohigh progenitors contributed only to transient erythroid engraftment and produced very low numbers of platelets in vivo. Donor-derived megakaryopoiesis occurred at higher densities in the spleen than in the bone marrow in animals receiving Rholowstem cells and peaked around day 28. Blockade of splenic engraftment using pertussis toxin did not affect the peak of splenic megakaryopoiesis, supporting the hypothesis that these megakaryocytes were derived from progenitors that originated in the bone marrow. These data emphasize that in vitro behavior of hematopoietic progenitor cell subsets does not always predict their behavior following transplantation. This study supports a major role for the spleen in thrombopoiesis following engraftment of transplanted stem cells in irradiated mice.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1719-1719
Author(s):  
Edward F. Srour ◽  
Tamara L. Horvath

Abstract Murine bone marrow-derived cells expressing Sca-1+c-kit+lin− (KSL), as well as subfractions of these cells, represent an enriched population of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) capable of long-term reconstitution of lethally irradiated recipients. Commitment to the hematopoietic lineage is invariably associated with expression of the pan-leukocyte marker CD45 which is also expressed on KSL cells. Whether KSL cells are the most primitive population of HSC present in the bone marrow (BM) is not fully resolved. We hypothesized that putative HSC that are more primitive than KSL cells may not express CD45 or genetic elements that mark early hematopoietic specification and commitment, but may mature under appropriate conditions into CD45+ cells capable of hematopoietic differentiation in conditioned hosts. BM cells from 8 to 10-week old BoyJ mice were collected by flushing and erythrocytes were lysed. The remaining cells were stained and sorted to yield CD45+ Sca-1+ c-kit+ (CD45+HSC) and CD45− Sca-1+ c-kit− (CD45−) cells which represented approximately 0.02% of total cells analyzed. PCR analysis of both cell populations revealed that CD45+HSC expressed CD45 and SCL but not PU.1 while CD45− cells did not express any of these genes. Directly after sorting, CD45+HSC, but not CD45− cells contained clonogenic cells that gave rise to hematopoietic colonies in progenitor cell assays. Similarly, while fresh CD45+HSC were able to respond to exogenous hematopoietic cytokines including SCF, TPO, and FL in liquid suspension cultures as evidenced by expansion and differentiation, their CD45− counterparts failed to proliferate under these conditions and none survived beyond 7 days of culture. When transplanted competitively into lethally irradiated congenic recipients, only freshly isolated CD45+HSC sustained donor-derived hematopoiesis, whereas hematopoiesis in mice injected with freshly isolated CD45− cells was sustained long term by competitor cells and endogenous host-derived stem cells. Both groups of CD45+HSC and CD45− cells could be expanded on irradiated M210B4 stromal cells when supplemented with SCF, TPO, and FL, with CD45− cells giving rise to cobblestone foci of small, round translucent cells beginning on day 7 of culture. Cultured CD45+HSC continued to express CD45 and SCL and, depending on the length of culture, also expressed PU.1. Interestingly, after 15 days in culture, CD45− cells expressed CD45 by RT-PCR and FACS (in addition to Sca-1) and also expressed mRNA for SCL. Given the ability of CD45− cells to expand under these conditions and to acquire CD45 expression, we next compared the repopulating potential of fresh and cultured CD45+HSC and CD45− cells using lethally irradiated C57Bl/6 recipients. As expected, fresh CD45+HSC sustained donor-derived engraftment and culture of these cells over M210B4 for 15 days reduced their repopulating potential more than 7-fold. In contrast, CD45− cells maintained on M210B4 (the expansion equivalent of 750 cells seeded) contributed to hematopoietic engraftment, albeit at low levels (under 5% chimerism). These data demonstrate that CD45− Sca-1+ c-kit− cells may be marrow resident precursors of hematopoietic stem cells and suggest that early stages of the HSC hierarchy may include CD45− cells. Whether these CD45− cells also posses endothelial differentiation potential and can give rise to CD45+HSC in vivo is now under investigation.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 2306-2306 ◽  
Author(s):  
Naomi J. Anderson ◽  
Ravi Bhatia

Abstract Interaction of the chemokine receptor CXCR4 with its ligand SDF-1α (SDF) has been reported to play an important role in engraftment of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) in the bone marrow (BM). However a critical requirement for CXCR4 in HSC engraftment is still controversial. It also remains unclear whether the effects that CXCR4 has on hematopoietic cell engraftment are related to enhanced homing of HSC to the bone marrow cavity, increased retention in marrow microenvironment or direct and indirect effects of CXCR4 stimulation on stem and progenitor cell proliferation, self-renewal and survival. To address these questions we have overexpressed CXCR4 in human cord blood CD34+ cells by transduction with an MSCV retroviral vector containing CXCR4 and eGFP (MIG-CXCR4). CXCR4 overexpressing cells were compared with control cells transduced with vectors expressing eGFP alone (MIG). CD34+eGFP+ cells were selected after transduction by flow cytometry sorting. We confirmed that CD34+ cells transduced with the MIG-CXCR4 vector demonstrated increased CXCR4 expression compared with MIG vector transduced controls (mean channel fluorescence for CXCR4 was 340±77.8 for MIG-CXCR4 transduced CD34+ cells compared with 142±37.1 for MIG transduced cells, n=8). MIG-CXCR4 transduced CD34+ cells demonstrated significantly enhanced chemotaxis to SDF in transwell migration assays (36±2% migration for MIG-CXCR4 vs. 20±4% migration for MIG transduced CD34+ cells to 100nM SDF-1, n=4, p=0.05). CD34+ cells transduced with MIG-CXCR4 demonstrated a 1.52±0.4 fold increase in expansion of total cell number compared with controls after 1 week of in vitro culture with growth factors (GF) [SCF (50ng/ml), TPO (100ng/ml), FL (100ng/ml), SDF (60ng/ml), n=3]. However, enhanced cellular expansion was not sustained on further GF culture. To evaluate the effect of CXCR4 overexpression on in vivo engraftment, CD34+ cells transduced with MIG-CXCR4 and MIG vectors were injected intravenously into sublethally irradiated NOD/SCID mice and human hematopoietic cell engraftment was evaluated after 6–8 weeks. MIG-CXCR4 transduced cells demonstrated significantly higher levels of engraftment with human CD45+ cells compared with MIG transduced cells (8±4.8% vs. 0.22±0.07% CD45+ cells in bone marrow, 1.3±0.9% vs. 0.2±0.09% CD45+ cells in spleen, and 1.8±1.0% vs. 0.3±0.25% CD45+ cells in peripheral blood for MIG-CXCR4 vs. MIG transduced cells, respectively, n=5). In addition, markedly higher levels of CD34+ cell engraftment was observed in the bone marrow of animals receiving MIG-CXCR4 vs. MIG transduced cells (1.7±1.0% vs. 0.06±0.03% CD34+ cells respectively, n=5). Consistent with this, the human CFC frequency in bone marrow of mice receiving MIG-CXCR4 transduced CD34+ cells was increased compared to mice receiving MIG transduced cells (31±0.5 CFC/100,000 cells vs. 5±3.2 CFC/100,000 cells, n=2,3, respectively). In conclusion, our results indicate that ectopic expression of CXCR4 in CD34+ cells results in enhanced engraftment of human hematopoietic cells and increased maintenance of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells in the NOD/SCID mouse model. The effects of CXCR4 overexpression are considerably more prominent in vivo than in direct in vitro assays. It therefore appears that altered stem and progenitor cell homing and microenvironmental interaction, rather than direct signaling to HSC, may be responsible for enhanced CD34+ cell engraftment and maintenance following CXCR4 receptor overexpression.


Author(s):  
Fatima Aerts-Kaya

: In contrast to their almost unlimited potential for expansion in vivo and despite years of dedicated research and optimization of expansion protocols, the expansion of Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSCs) in vitro remains remarkably limited. Increased understanding of the mechanisms that are involved in maintenance, expansion and differentiation of HSCs will enable the development of better protocols for expansion of HSCs. This will allow procurement of HSCs with long-term engraftment potential and a better understanding of the effects of the external influences in and on the hematopoietic niche that may affect HSC function. During collection and culture of HSCs, the cells are exposed to suboptimal conditions that may induce different levels of stress and ultimately affect their self-renewal, differentiation and long-term engraftment potential. Some of these stress factors include normoxia, oxidative stress, extra-physiologic oxygen shock/stress (EPHOSS), endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, replicative stress, and stress related to DNA damage. Coping with these stress factors may help reduce the negative effects of cell culture on HSC potential, provide a better understanding of the true impact of certain treatments in the absence of confounding stress factors. This may facilitate the development of better ex vivo expansion protocols of HSCs with long-term engraftment potential without induction of stem cell exhaustion by cellular senescence or loss of cell viability. This review summarizes some of available strategies that may be used to protect HSCs from culture-induced stress conditions.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (3) ◽  
pp. 860-869 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiji Fukuda ◽  
Huimin Bian ◽  
Andrew G. King ◽  
Louis M. Pelus

Abstract Mobilized peripheral blood hematopoietic stem cells (PBSCs) demonstrate accelerated engraftment compared with bone marrow; however, mechanisms responsible for enhanced engraftment remain unknown. PBSCs mobilized by GROβ (GROβΔ4/CXCL2Δ4) or the combination of GROβΔ4 plus granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) restore neutrophil and platelet recovery faster than G-CSF–mobilized PBSCs. To determine mechanisms responsible for faster hematopoietic recovery, we characterized immunophenotype and function of the GROβ-mobilized grafts. PBSCs mobilized by GROβΔ4 alone or with G-CSF contained significantly more Sca-1+-c-kit+-lineage− (SKL) cells and more primitive CD34−-SKL cells compared with cells mobilized by G-CSF and demonstrated superior competitive long-term repopulation activity, which continued to increase in secondary and tertiary recipients. GROβΔ4-mobilized SKL cells adhered better to VCAM-1+ endothelial cells compared with G-CSF–mobilized cells. GROβΔ4-mobilized PBSCs did not migrate well to the chemokine stromal derived factor (SDF)-1α in vitro that was associated with higher CD26 expression. However, GROβΔ4-mobilized SKL and c-Kit+ lineage− (KL) cells homed more efficiently to marrow in vivo, which was not affected by selective CXCR4 and CD26 antagonists. These data suggest that GROβΔ4-mobilized PBSCs are superior in reconstituting long-term hematopoiesis, which results from differential mobilization of early stem cells with enhanced homing and long-term repopulating capacity. In addition, homing and engraftment of GROβΔ4-mobilized cells is less dependent on the SDF-1α/CXCR4 axis.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1200-1200
Author(s):  
Hui Yu ◽  
Youzhong Yuan ◽  
Xianmin Song ◽  
Feng Xu ◽  
Hongmei Shen ◽  
...  

Abstract Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are significantly restricted in their ability to regenerate themselves in the irradiated hosts and this exhausting effect appears to be accelerated in the absence of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (CKI), p21. Our recent study demonstrated that unlike p21 absence, deletion of the distinct CKI, p18 results in a strikingly positive effect on long-term engraftment owing to increased self-renewing divisions in vivo (Yuan et al, 2004). To test the extent to which enhanced self-renewal in the absence of p18 can persist over a prolonged period of time, we first performed the classical serial bone marrow transfer (sBMT). The activities of hematopoietic cells from p18−/− cell transplanted mice were significantly higher than those from p18+/+ cell transplanted mice during the serial transplantation. To our expectation, there was no detectable donor p18+/+ HSC progeny in the majority (4/6) of recipients after three rounds of sBMT. However, we observed significant engraftment levels (66.7% on average) of p18-null progeny in all recipients (7/7) within a total period of 22 months. In addition, in follow-up with our previous study involving the use of competitive bone marrow transplantation (cBMT), we found that p18−/− HSCs during the 3rd cycle of cBMT in an extended long-term period of 30 months were still comparable to the freshly isolated p18+/+ cells from 8 week-old young mice. Based on these two independent assays and the widely-held assumption of 1-10/105 HSC frequency in normal unmanipulated marrow, we estimated that p18−/− HSCs had more than 50–500 times more regenerative potential than p18+/+ HSCs, at the cellular age that is equal to a mouse life span. Interestingly, p18 absence was able to significantly loosen the accelerated exhaustion of hematopoietic repopulation caused by p21 deficiency as examined in the p18/p21 double mutant cells with the cBMT model. This data directly indicates the opposite effect of these two molecules on HSC durability. To define whether p18 absence may override the regulatory mechanisms that maintain the HSC pool size within the normal range, we performed the transplantation with 80 highly purified HSCs (CD34-KLS) and then determined how many competitive reconstitution units (CRUs) were regenerated in the primary recipients by conducting secondary transplantation with limiting dilution analysis. While 14 times more CRUs were regenerated in the primary recipients transplanted with p18−/−HSCs than those transplanted with p18+/+ HSCs, the level was not beyond that found in normal non-transplanted mice. Therefore, the expansion of HSCs in the absence of p18 is still subject to some inhibitory regulation, perhaps exerted by the HSC niches in vivo. Such a result was similar to the effect of over-expression of the transcription factor, HoxB4 in hematopoietic cells. However, to our surprise, the p18 mRNA level was not significantly altered by over-expression of HoxB4 in Lin-Sca-1+ cells as assessed by real time PCR (n=4), thereby suggesting a HoxB4-independent transcriptional regulation on p18 in HSCs. Taken together, our current results shed light on strategies aimed at sustaining the durability of therapeutically transplanted HSCs for a lifetime treatment. It also offers a rationale for the feasibility study intended to temporarily target p18 during the early engraftment for therapeutic purposes.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 1289-1289
Author(s):  
Ping Xia ◽  
Richard Emmanuel ◽  
Kuo Isabel ◽  
Malik Punam

Abstract We have previously shown that self-inactivating lentiviral vectors infect quiescent hematopoietic stem cells (HSC), express long-term, resist proviral silencing in HSC and express in a lineage specific manner. However, their random integration into the host chromosome results in variable expression, dependent upon the flanking host chromatin (Mohamedali et al, Mol. Therapy 2004). Moreover, the recent occurrence of leukemogenesis from activation of a cellular oncogene by the viral enhancer elements calls for safer vector designs, with expression cassettes that can be ‘insulated’ from flanking cellular genes. We analyzed the role of the chicken β-globin locus hypersensitive site 4 insulator element (cHS4) in a self-inactivating (SIN) lentiviral vector in the RBC progeny of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) in long term in vivo. We designed an erythroid-specific SIN-lentiviral vector I8HKGW, expressing GFP driven by the human ankyrin gene promoter and containing two erythroid-specific enhancer elements and compared it to an analogous vector I8HKGW-I, where the cHS4 insulator was inserted in the SIN deletion to flank the I8HKGW expression cassette at both ends upon integration. First, murine erythroleukemia (MEL) cells were transduced at <5% transduction efficiency and GFP+ cells were sorted to generate clones. Single copy MEL clones showed no difference in the mean GFP fluorescence intensity (MFI) between the I8HKGW+ and the I8HKGW-I+ MEL clones. However, there was a reduction in the chromatin position effect variegation (PEV), reflected by reduced coefficient of variation of GFP expression (CV) in I8HKGW-I clones (n=115; P<0.01), similar to in vitro results reported by Ramezani et al (Blood 2003). Next, we examined for expression and PEV in the RBC progeny of HSC, using the secondary murine bone marrow transplant model. Lethally irradiated C57Bl6 (CD45.2) mice were transplanted with I8HKGW and I8HKGW-I transduced B6SJL (CD45.1) Sca+Lin- HSC and 4–6 months later, secondary transplants were performed. Mice were analyzed 3–4 months following secondary transplants (n=43). While expression from both I8HKGW and I8HKGW-I vectors appeared similar in secondary mice (46±6.0% vs. 48±3.6% GFP+ RBC; MFI 31±2.6 vs. 29±1.4), there were 0.37 vs. 0.22 copies/cell in I8HKGW and I8HKGW-I secondary recipients, respectively (n=43), suggesting that the probability of GFP expression from I8HKGW-I vectors was superior when equalized for vector copy. The CV of GFP fluorescence in RBC was remarkably reduced to 55±1.7 in I8HKGW-I vs. 196±32 in I8HKGW RBC (P<0.001). We therefore, analyzed these data at a clonal level in secondary CFU-S and tertiary CFU-S. The I8HKGW-I secondary CFU-S had more GFP+ cells (32.4±4.4%) vs. I8HKGW CFU-S (8.1±1.2%, n=143, P<0.1x10E-11). Similarly, I8HKGW-I tertiary CFU-S also had more GFP+ cells (25±1.8%) vs. I8HKGW CFU-S (6.3±0.8%, n=166, P<0.3x10E-10). We also plated bone marrow from secondary mice in methylcellulose and analyzed GFP expression in individual BFU-E. The I8HKGW-I tertiary BFU-E had more GFP+ cells (28±3.9%) vs. I8HKGW BFU-E (11±5%, n=50, P<0.03) with significantly reduced CV (67 vs 125, n=50, P<6.6X10E-7). Taken together, the ‘insulated’ erythroid-specific SIN-lentiviral vector increased the probability of expression of proviral integrants and reduced PEV in vivo, resulting in higher, consistent transgene expression in the erythroid cell progeny of HSC. In addition, the enhancer blocking effect of the cHS4, although not tested here, would further improve bio-safety of these vectors for gene therapy for RBC disorders.


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.


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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