Genetic Modification of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells Enables Contribution to the Cardiac Progenitor Pool and Developing Myocardium In Vivo.

Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 3730-3730
Author(s):  
Evan J Colletti ◽  
Melisa Soland ◽  
Stephen St. Jeor ◽  
Esmail D Zanjani ◽  
Christopher D Porada ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3730 Although a great deal of attention has been focused on developing cell based therapies for cardiac repair, only limited success has been achieved to date. Controversy still remains as to which specific type of cells should be transplanted and what role they play in the repair of damaged areas. Human autologous mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are currently being used in clinical trials, and early results show improvement in the overall cardiac function. This improvement is mediated by inhibition of inflammatory signaling, fibroblast recruitment, and scar tissue development; however, little to none of the transplanted cells contribute to the working myocardium. It is likely that the extensive rate of cell death observed within cells efficiently delivered to the heart constitutes a key event precluding success of cell-based myocardial repair. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL), important mediators of allograft rejection, have also been implicated in immune responses against cardiac self-antigens subsequent to myocardial damage after myocardial infarction. Likewise, Natural Killer (NK) cells play an important role in targeting and destroying allogeneic and autologous cells undergoing distress. Therefore, it is possible that, in the event of myocardial damage, CTL and NK cells present at the site of injury contribute significantly to the death of the cells delivered for myocardial rescue, reducing their therapeutic effectiveness. We have shown that MSC transduced with a viral vector encoding the human cytomegalovirus unique short region 6, (hMSC-US6), are less susceptible to both NK killing and induction of CTL proliferation when compared to untransduced MSC, and to MSC transduced with a vector encoding only NPT-II (MSC-E). Therefore, in these studies we compared the ability of hMSC-US6 and hMSC-E to give rise to cardiac cells upon transplantation in a xenogeneic sheep fetal model. 5.6×104 of each cell population was transplanted into fetal sheep at 60 days of gestation (n=4). Two months after transplant, heart tissues were collected and the contribution of transplanted MSC to the fetal hearts was evaluated by confocal microscopy and NPT-II immunofluorescence. Examination of hearts from animals transplanted with MSC-US6 showed that engrafted cells contributed not only to the myocardium, as demonstrated by co-localization of NPT-II and Troponin-I (TNI), but were also able to contribute to the cardiac stem cell pool, as evidenced by co-localization of NPT-II and c-kit positivity. In the myocardium, MSC-US6 contributed to 2.6% of total TNI+ cardiomyocytes (53.9% of all cells in the heart are TNI+ at this stage of fetal gestation). Furthermore, at this stage in development, the c-kit+ cardiac progenitor pool constitutes 12.7% of the total cells in the heart, with the majority of the c-kit population localizing perivascularly. Upon examination, 4.5% of these c-kit+ cells were also NPT-II+, demonstrating the contribution of MSC-US6 to the heart stem cell pool. By contrast, the heart of animals that received MSC-E did not contain NPT-II+/TNI+ cardiomyocytes or NPT-II+/c-kit+ cardiac stem cells; the transplanted cells only contributed to the Purkinje fiber system in the heart. Although the transplantation model used is a non-injury model, MSC are still able to elicit an immune response in this non-autologous setting, activating CTL and NK cells already present in the recipient at the time of transplant. In conclusion, our results show that expression of US-6 protein allows transplanted human MSC to evade existing CTL- and NK-mediated immunity and contribute to the myocardial tissue through integration into the cardiac stem cell pool in the chimeric fetal heart. Therefore, engineering MSC to evade resident immune cells may decrease post-infusion cell death and allow these cells to contribute directly to the repair/regeneration of the injured myocardium. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Blood ◽  
1968 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 271-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
HIDEAKI MIZOGUCHI ◽  
YASUSADA MIURA ◽  
FUMIMARO TAKAKU ◽  
KIKU NAKAO

Abstract It is shown that an in vitro system of assaying the size of an erythropoietin-responsive stem cell pool could be applied to the spleens of polycythemic mice after irradiation and bone marrow transplantation. With this method, the presence of erythropoietin-responsive cells in the spleen was first detected on the second day after transplantation. Therefore, it is considered probable that colony-forming cells and erythropoietin-responsive cells are at different stages of maturation or cell cycle. Furthermore, necessity of erythropoietin for further differentiation of transplanted stem cells into erythroblasts is also suggested.


Circulation ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 276-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonella De Angelis ◽  
Elena Piegari ◽  
Donato Cappetta ◽  
Laura Marino ◽  
Amelia Filippelli ◽  
...  

eLife ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salvador C Herrera ◽  
Erika A Bach

Exhaustion of stem cells is a hallmark of aging. In the Drosophila testis, dedifferentiated germline stem cells (GSCs) derived from spermatogonia increase during lifespan, leading to the model that dedifferentiation counteracts the decline of GSCs in aged males. To test this, we blocked dedifferentiation by mis-expressing the differentiation factor bag of marbles (bam) in spermatogonia while lineage-labeling these cells. Strikingly, blocking bam-lineage dedifferentiation under normal conditions in virgin males has no impact on the GSC pool. However, in mated males or challenging conditions, inhibiting bam-lineage dedifferentiation markedly reduces the number of GSCs and their ability to proliferate and differentiate. We find that bam-lineage derived GSCs have significantly higher proliferation rates than sibling GSCs in the same testis. We determined that Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) activity is autonomously required for bam-lineage dedifferentiation. Overall, we show that dedifferentiation provides a mechanism to maintain the germline and ensure fertility under chronically stressful conditions.


2010 ◽  
Vol 107 (7) ◽  
pp. 913-922 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantinos E. Hatzistergos ◽  
Henry Quevedo ◽  
Behzad N. Oskouei ◽  
Qinghua Hu ◽  
Gary S. Feigenbaum ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 740-740
Author(s):  
E Jane Hubbard

Abstract Failure to maintain stem cells with age is associated with conditions such as tissue degeneration and increased susceptibility to tissue damage. We use the C. elegans germline stem cell system as a model to study stem cell aging. This system combines a well-established model for aging with an accessible stem cell system, providing a unique opportunity to understand how aging influences stem cell dynamics. The germline stem/progenitor pool in in C. elegans becomes depleted over time. At the cellular level, aging influences both the size of the stem cell pool and the proliferation rate of stem cells. The flux of differentiated cells also affects how aging impacts the pool. This depletion is partially alleviated in mutants with reduced insulin/IGF-like signaling via inhibition of the transcription factor DAF-16/FOXO. In this role, DAF-16 does not act in the germ line, and its anatomical requirements are different from its previously described roles in larval germline proliferation, dauer control, and lifespan regulation. We found that DAF-16/FOXO is required in certain somatic cells in the proximal part of the reproductive system to regulate the stem cell pool. We also find that the degree to which various age-defying perturbations affect lifespan does not correlate with their effect on germline stem cell maintenance. We are investigating additional aspects of aging germline stem cells using this system.


Blood ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 95 (7) ◽  
pp. 2446-2448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christa E. Müller-Sieburg ◽  
Rebecca H. Cho ◽  
Hans B. Sieburg ◽  
Sergey Kupriyanov ◽  
Roy Riblet

Abstract Previously we reported that the size of the stem cell compartment (measured as LTC-IC) is 11-fold greater in DBA/2 than in C57BL/6 mice, and we identified genes that regulate the size of the stem cell pool. To determine whether stem cell intrinsic or extrinsic events account for these differences, we created chimeras by aggregating morulae from the strains C57BL/6 and DBA/2. In these chimeras stem cells of both genotypes are exposed to a common mixed environment. Thus, an equalization of stem cell frequencies is expected if stem cell extrinsic effects dominate. Conversely, the parental ratio of LTC-IC should be preserved if the regulation is stem cell autonomous. For each chimera, individual LTC-IC were genotyped on the clonal levels by analyzing their progeny. We found that most of the difference that regulates the size of the stem cell compartment was intrinsic.


eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
ChangHwan Lee ◽  
Erika B Sorensen ◽  
Tina R Lynch ◽  
Judith Kimble

C. elegans Notch signaling maintains a pool of germline stem cells within their single-celled mesenchymal niche. Here we investigate the Notch transcriptional response in germline stem cells using single-molecule fluorescence in situ hybridization coupled with automated, high-throughput quantitation. This approach allows us to distinguish Notch-dependent nascent transcripts in the nucleus from mature mRNAs in the cytoplasm. We find that Notch-dependent active transcription sites occur in a probabilistic fashion and, unexpectedly, do so in a steep gradient across the stem cell pool. Yet these graded nuclear sites create a nearly uniform field of mRNAs that extends beyond the region of transcriptional activation. Therefore, active transcription sites provide a precise view of where the Notch-dependent transcriptional complex is productively engaged. Our findings offer a new window into the Notch transcriptional response and demonstrate the importance of assaying nascent transcripts at active transcription sites as a readout for canonical signaling.


2005 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 592-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas Larsson ◽  
Ulrika Blank ◽  
Jenny Klintman ◽  
Mattias Magnusson ◽  
Stefan Karlsson

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