scholarly journals An irradiated marrow niche reveals a small non-collagenous protein mediator of homing, dermatopontin

Author(s):  
Ashley Kramer ◽  
Yuliana Astuti ◽  
Alexis Elfstrum ◽  
Michael Jonathan Lehrke ◽  
Jakub Tolar ◽  
...  

Hematopoietic cell homing after hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) is governed by several pathways involving marrow niche cells that are evoked after pre-HCT conditioning. To understand the factors that play a role in homing, we performed expression analysis on the zebrafish marrow niche cells following conditioning. We determined that the non-collagenous protein extracellular matrix related protein dermatopontin (Dpt) was upregulated seven-fold in response to irradiation. Studies in mice revealed DPT induction both with radiation and lipopolysaccharide exposure. Interestingly, we found that co-incubation of zebrafish or murine hematopoietic cells with rDPT impedes hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell homing by 50% and 86%, respectively. Similarly, this translated into a 24% reduction in long term engraftment (versus control, p = 0.01). We found DPT to interact with VLA-4 and block hematopoietic - endothelial cell adhesion and transendothelial migration. Finally, a DPT knockout mouse displayed a 60% increase in homing of hematopoietic cells versus wildtype (p = 0.03) with slight improvement in long-term LSK-SLAM engraftment (2-fold, p = 0.04). These data show that the extracellular matrix (ECM)-related protein DPT increases with radiation and transiently impedes the transendothelial migration of hematopoietic cells to the marrow.

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 782-782
Author(s):  
Troy C Lund ◽  
Ashley C. Kramer ◽  
Paul Stadem ◽  
Michael Lehrke ◽  
Taylour Hanson

Abstract The hematopoietic cell niche serves to maintain hematopoiesis and recruit cells after hematopoietic cell transplant. The determinants of homing and engraftment after transplant are incompletely understood, but are often mediated by small chemokines secreted by the "niche" cells (stromal, endothelial, reticular, etc). We have shown that the hematopoietic cell homing to adipocyte-rich marrow is decreased by 50% compared to adipocyte-poor regions at 20 hours after adoptive transfer in irradiated recipients (n = 9, p < 0.05). To search for chemokines responsible for homing inhibition, we performed an unsupervised cluster analysis of the transcriptomes of adipocytes versus other niche cells in the marrow including CD45+, osteoblasts, endothelial cells, etc. We found that a small protein (26 kDa), dermatopontin (DPT), was highly expressed in adipocytes (10-fold versus endothelial cells and 7.5-fold versus osteocytes, ANOVA p = 0.02). Immunohistochemistry (IHC) and ELISA confirmed that DPT expression was predominately localized to adipocyte-rich regions of the marrow. We also found the intramarrow DPT concentrations were 57.1-fold elevated compared to circulating levels of DPT (n = 10 p = < 0.0001). After radiation, DPT was increased 20-fold in the bone marrow as shown by RT-PCR (p < 0.01). Homing assays in DPT pre-treated irradiated mice showed a 90% reduction (n = 12, p = 0.02) in whole marrow and a 40% reduction (n = 6, p < 0.05) lin-sca1+kit+ cells that migrated to the marrow 20 hours post-transplant, respectively. This reduction in homing translated to decreases in short- and long-term multilineage engraftment when assessed in primary and secondary transplant recipients. DPT contains a heparan-binding domain at its N-terminus, and co-treatment with DPT and heparin completely abrogated DPT's ability to inhibit homing. Colony forming unit assays and apoptosis assays of LSK cells revealed no toxic effects of DPT on hematopoietic cells suggesting a specific defect in cell migration. Adhesion assays showed a 55% decrease in the number of hematopoietic cells that adhered to an endothelial monolayer when DPT was present (n = 6, p = 0.01), and IHC revealed that DPT binds to the inner endothelial surface of the vascular after myeloablative conditioning. Furthermore, DPT was able to cause previously attached hematopoietic cells to be released from endothelial monolayers. We performed CFU assays of circulating cells 20 hours after adoptive transfer and found that DPT led to an increased number of circulating CFU (149 v 83 CFU/ml, p = 0.002 indicating that transplanted cells remained in circulation instead of efficiently homing to the marrow likely due to loss of adherence. These data suggest that DPT retards the ability of hematopoietic cells to adhere and transmigrate across the endothelial barrier during the homing process particularly in regions of increase adiposity. Thus DPT is a new and novel regulator of hematopoietic cell trafficking, albeit with negative consequences. While there have been several recent attempts to expand cell products or increase hematopoietic cell homing efficiency prior to transplant, overcoming or circumventing the "hurdles" of homing may also be an approach toward improving engraftment. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2010 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric C. Walter ◽  
Mauricio Orozco-Levi ◽  
Alba Ramirez-Sarmiento ◽  
Afonso Vigorito ◽  
Paulo V. Campregher ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. S225
Author(s):  
Eric Kim ◽  
Lindsey Hageman ◽  
Jessica Wu ◽  
Liton Francisco ◽  
Emily Ness ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 4181-4181
Author(s):  
Lingbo Liu ◽  
Daohong Zhou ◽  
Yong Wang

Abstract Our previous studies demonstrated that exposure to ionizing radiation (IR) causes long-term bone marrow (BM) damage by induction cellular senescence in hematopoietic cells. The senescent hematopoietic cells exhibited an elevated activity of the senescence associated β-galactosidase (SA-β-gal), a biomaker for senescent cells, and expressed increased levels of p16Ink4a (p16), whose expression has been implicated in the establishment and maintenance of cellular senescence. Activation of the p38 MAPK pathway has been implicated in the induction of cell cycle arrest and senescence in response to a variety of stressors in part by up-regulating the expression of p16. Therefore, in the present study we examined the role of the p38 MAPK pathway in IR-induced hematopoietic cell senescence. The results showed that exposure of male C57BL/6 mice to a sublethal dose (6.5 Gy) of total body irradiation (TBI) caused a sustained activation (&gt;4 weeks) of p38 in Lin− c-kit+ Sca-1+ (LKS+) hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). This activation was associated with a persistent up-regulation of p16 and quantitative and qualitative reduction of LKS+ HSCs. Inhibition of p38 activity with SB202190 (a specific p38 inhibitor) attenuated IR-induced inhibition of the hematopoietic function of BM hematopoietic cells in an in vitro colony forming cell (CFC) assay. Moreover, the production of hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) in SB202190-treated BM cells was 7.5 fold higher than that of irradiated cells without SB202190 treatment after five weeks of long-term BM cell culture (LTBMC); and the cells treated with SB202190 after IR retained their clonogenic function while the control irradiated cells lose their ability to form colonies. These findings suggest that p38 may play an important role in mediating IR-induced suppression of hematopoietic cell function and pharmacological inhibition of the p38 pathway may potentially be developed as novel therapeutic strategy to ameliorate IR- and chemotherapy-induced BM toxicity.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 3265-3265
Author(s):  
Antonia M.S. Mueller ◽  
Jessica A. Allen ◽  
David Miklos ◽  
Judith A. Shizuru

Abstract Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) recipients often exhibit B cell (BC) lymphopenia due, in part, to graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD). Here, we studied the impact of donor T cells (TC) on BC deficiency post minor antigen-mismatched HCT. Following lethal irradiation, BALB.B mice were given FACS purified hematopoietic stem cells (HSC: cKIT+Thy1.1loLin-Sca-1+) alone, with whole splenocytes (SP), CD4 or CD8 TC from minor antigen-mismatched C57BL/6 (B6) mice. Chimerism analyses were performed on day (d) 30, 60, and 90. When pure HSC were transplanted, BCs reconstituted promptly (median 33% of lymphocytes [d30]; 61% [d60]; 74% [d90]), whereas TC engraftment was retarded and did not achieve full donor chimerism. Addition of SP or CD4 TCs, or to a lesser degree CD8 TCs, delayed BC reconstitution, with extremely low percentages of BCs beyond d60. This BC suppression correlated with the degree of acute GVHD, and BC numbers increased with recovery from GVHD. Additionally, this BC suppression was in stark contrast to TC development, with TC transfer resulting in early conversion to full donor chimerism. To test if previous events in the donor sensitize TCs against BC features (e.g. minor antigens), thereby promoting anti-BC cytotoxicity post-HCT, TCs from B6 muMT mice were co-transplanted with HSC. muMT mice are devoid of mature BCs because they lack the mu chain; consequently, their TCs were not exposed to BCs prior to transfer. Remarkably, BC engraftment was completely prevented through d90. TCs regenerated faster, but the vast majority originated from spleen and not HSC. To differentiate this lack of BC engraftment from GVHD-associated, alloreactive BC lymphopenia, syngenic B6 recipients were used. Again, initially complete blockade of BC engraftment was observed, although this suppression was overcome earlier post-HCT as compared to the minor-mismatched pair (median % BC d60: ’HSC only’ recipients 52%; +CD4 17%; +CD8 48%). To clarify if this phenomenon was a purely cytotoxic reaction of muMT TC against BCs, we used WT B6 HSC +/− SP as donors and lethally or sublethally irradiated muMT mice as recipients. All groups, including sublethally irradiated animals, where host muMT TC were still present, engrafted BCs making a direct anti-BC cytotoxicity unlikely as the sole cause of the BC inhibition. FACS analysis of bone marrow was used to assess the developmental stages of BCs (Hardy fractions (Fr.) A-F) and revealed GVHD recipients with peripheral B lymphopenia have a shift of B220+ cells from more mature Fr. D-F to immature Fr. A-C stages and a lower proportion of IgM expressing BC. Recipients of the muMT TCs showed, in addition to a shift to more immature stages, a clear block in BC development with an absent switch to the expression of IgM (stage D to E)(Fig. 1). In conclusion, muMT TCs are capable of blocking BC maturation when transferred into WT mice, suggesting defective TC activity in muMT animals necessary for the co-development of both BCs and TCs. Furthermore, this study provides evidence that mature TCs are capable of interfering with BC regeneration post-HCT. Hence, our HCT combinations using WT and muMT B6 mice provide a powerful tool to study the role of TC function in the process of donor BC development post-HCT.


2010 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. e2010018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria L. Delioukina ◽  
Stephen J. Forman

Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most common hematologic malignancy in adults with an incidence rate of 4.2 per 100,000 per year. CLL frequently takes an indolent course, with some patients not requiring treatment for years, yet is incurable by currently available chemo- and immuno-therapeutic modalities. Despite high initial response rates, particularly to purine analogues, patients invariably relapse and subsequently develop resistance to therapy. The traditional “watchful waiting” approach to CLL is being challenged by data showing that treatments used early in the disease course impact long-term overall and progression-free survivals . The only curative treatment for CLL currently, is allogeneic hematopoeietic cell transplantation (alloHCT). In contrast to autologous transplant, myeloablative alloHCT for CLL patients generates durable remissions with promising survival plateaus; however, significant transplant related mortality (TRM) is also observed (25-50%) . At present the fact remains that for poor-risk CLL, alloHCT is the only treatment with the potential of providing long-term disease control. Future combinations with emerging low-toxicity therapies may further enhance the curative potential of allogeniec hematopoietic cell transplant. New drugs can also potentially enable refractory patients to attain response as a bridge to more effective stem cell transplantation.


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