scholarly journals 36 Chemoprotection Of Long-Term Repopulating Hematopoietic Stem Cells From Alkylator Therapy: in vivo Comparison of Gene-Transfer Vectors that Express a DNA Repair Protein.

2006 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 496-496
Author(s):  
S Cai ◽  
A Ernstberger ◽  
S Goebel ◽  
H Hanenberg ◽  
K E Pollok
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 ◽  
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.


1994 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 350-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Bienzle ◽  
A. C. Abrams-Ogg ◽  
S. A. Kruth ◽  
J. Ackland-Snow ◽  
R. F. Carter ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 277-287 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pamela H. Correll ◽  
Yvonne Kew ◽  
Leland K. Perry ◽  
Roscoe O. Brady ◽  
John K. Fink ◽  
...  

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 ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 96 (12) ◽  
pp. 3757-3762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hsiang-Chun Hsu ◽  
Hideo Ema ◽  
Mitsujiro Osawa ◽  
Yukio Nakamura ◽  
Toshio Suda ◽  
...  

Tie-2 receptor tyrosine kinase expressed in endothelial and hematopoietic cells is believed to play a role in both angiogenesis and hematopoiesis during development of the mouse embryo. This article addressed whether Tie-2 is expressed on fetal liver hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) at day 14 of gestation. With the use of anti–Tie-2 monoclonal antibody, its expression was detected in approximately 7% of an HSC population of Kit-positive, Sca-1–positive, lineage-negative or -low, and AA4.1-positive (KSLA) cells. These Tie-2–positive KSLA (T+ KSLA) cells represent 0.01% to 0.02% of fetal liver cells. In vitro colony and in vivo competitive repopulation assays were performed for T+ KSLA cells and Tie-2–negative KSLA (T− KSLA) cells. In the presence of stem cell factor, interleukin-3, and erythropoietin, 80% of T+ KSLA cells formed colonies in vitro, compared with 40% of T− KSLA cells. Long-term multilineage repopulating cells were detected in T+ KSLA cells, but not in T− KSLA cells. An in vivo limiting dilution analysis revealed that at least 1 of 8 T+ KSLA cells were such repopulating cells. The successful secondary transplantation initiated with a limited number of T+ KSLA cells suggests that these cells have self-renewal potential. In addition, engraftment of T+ KSLA cells in conditioned newborn mice indicates that these HSCs can be adapted equally by the adult and newborn hematopoietic environments. The data suggest that T+ KSLA cells represent HSCs in the murine fetal liver.


Blood ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 102 (2) ◽  
pp. 506-513 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derek A. Persons ◽  
Esther R. Allay ◽  
Nobukuni Sawai ◽  
Phillip W. Hargrove ◽  
Thomas P. Brent ◽  
...  

AbstractSuccessful gene therapy of β-thalassemia will require replacement of the abnormal erythroid compartment with erythropoiesis derived from genetically corrected, autologous hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). However, currently attainable gene transfer efficiencies into human HSCs are unlikely to yield sufficient numbers of corrected cells for a clinical benefit. Here, using a murine model of β-thalassemia, we demonstrate for the first time that selective enrichment in vivo of transplanted, drug-resistant HSCs can be used therapeutically and may therefore be a useful approach to overcome limiting gene transfer. We used an oncoretroviral vector to transfer a methylguanine methyltransferase (MGMT) drug-resistance gene into normal bone marrow cells. These cells were transplanted into β-thalassemic mice given nonmyeloablative pretransplantation conditioning with temozolomide (TMZ) and O6-benzylguanine (BG). A majority of mice receiving 2 additional courses of TMZ/BG demonstrated in vivo selection of the drug-resistant cells and amelioration of anemia, compared with untreated control animals. These results were extended using a novel γ-globin/MGMT dual gene lentiviral vector. Following drug treatment, normal mice that received transduced cells had an average 67-fold increase in γ-globin expressing red cells. These studies demonstrate that MGMT-based in vivo selection may be useful to increase genetically corrected cells to therapeutic levels in patients with β-thalassemia.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 267-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Maillard ◽  
Seth E. Pross ◽  
Olga Shestova ◽  
Hong Sai ◽  
Jon C. Aster ◽  
...  

Abstract Canonical Notch signaling operates through a highly conserved pathway that regulates the differentiation and homeostasis of hematopoietic cells. Ligand-receptor binding initiates proteolytic release of the Notch intracellular domain (ICN) which migrates to the nucleus, binds the transcription factor CSL/RBPJk and activates target genes through the recruitment of transcriptional coactivators of the Mastermind-like family (MAML). Notch signaling is essential for the emergence of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) during fetal life, but its effects on adult HSCs are controversial. In gain-of-function experiments, activation of Notch signaling in adult HSCs increased their self-renewal potential in vitro and in vivo. However, loss-of-function studies have provided conflicting results as to the role of physiological Notch signaling in HSC maintenance and homeostasis. To address this question, we expressed DNMAML1, a GFP-tagged pan-inhibitor of Notch signaling, in mouse HSCs. We have shown previously that DNMAML1 interferes with the formation of the ICN/CSL/MAML transcriptional activation complex and blocks signaling from all four Notch receptors (Notch1-4) (Maillard, Blood 2004). Transfer of DNMAML1-transduced bone marrow (BM) as compared to control GFP-transduced BM into lethally irradiated recipients gave rise to similar long-term stable expression of GFP for at least 6 months after transplant. DNMAML1 and GFP-transduced cells contributed equally to all hematopoietic lineages, except to the T cell and marginal zone B cell lineages, which are Notch-dependent. Expression of DNMAML1 did not affect the size of the BM progenitor compartment (Lin negative, Sca-1 positive, c-Kit high, or LSK cells), or the proportion of LSK cells that were negative for Flt3 and L-Selectin expression (containing long-term HSCs). The stem cell function of DNMAML1-transduced LSK cells was further assessed with in vivo competitive repopulation assays in lethally irradiated recipients. DNMAML1 and GFP-transduced LSK cells competed equally well with wild-type BM, as judged by their contribution to the myeloid lineage up to 4 months post-transplant, through two successive rounds of transplantation. Our data indicate that canonical Notch signaling is dispensable for the maintenance of stem cell function in adult HSCs.


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