scholarly journals The Role of Forkhead Box 1 (FOXO1) in the Immune System: Dendritic Cells, T Cells, B Cells, and Hematopoietic Stem Cells

2017 ◽  
Vol 37 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adriana Alicia Cabrera-Ortega ◽  
Daniel Feinberg ◽  
Youde Liang ◽  
Carlos Rossa ◽  
Dana T. Graves
Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 4107-4107
Author(s):  
Max Jan ◽  
Florian Scherer ◽  
David M. Kurtz ◽  
Aaron M Newman ◽  
Henning Stehr ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Pre-leukemic hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) have been implicated in AML (Jan et al STM 2012) and also for several lymphoid leukemias including ALL, HCL, and CLL. Separately, relapse of ALL following CD19 CAR-T cell therapy has been associated with lymphomyeloid lineage switch. Finally, healthy persons with clonally expanded HSCs are at increased risk of hematologic malignancies including lymphomas, and in mouse DLBCL models we previously demonstrated the oncogenic sufficiency of BCL6 overexpression in HSC (Green et al 2014 Nat Comm). Nevertheless, the cellular origin of DLBCL in the majority of patients is not definitively known. We sought to investigate the presence of mutations found in DLBCL within matched HSCs. Methods: We deeply genotyped somatic mutations in diagnostic biopsy tissues of 16 patients with DLBCL using CAPP-Seq to a median sequencing depth of 1100x (Newman et al 2014 Nat Med; Scherer et al 2015 ASH). We then profiled each patient for evidence implicating HSCs using somatic mutation lineage tracing, in either direct or indirect fashion. For direct evaluation, we used highly purified, serially FACS-sorted HSCs from grossly uninvolved bone marrow (BM) (n=5; Fig 1a-b). For indirect assessment, we either profiled serial tumor biopsies (n=13), or interrogated sorted cells from terminally differentiated blood lineages (n=7), including peripheral CD3+ T cells, CD14+ Monocytes, and B cells expressing a light-chain discordant to that of tumor isotype. HSCs and differentiated lineages were then interrogated by direct genotyping, using 3 highly sensitive orthogonal quantitative methods, including Myd88 L265P droplet digital PCR (n=6), BCL6 translocation breakpoint qPCR (n=4), and DLBCL CAPP-Seq profiling of 268 genes (n=5). We used the theoretical limit of detection (LOD) genotyping performance for CAPP-Seq (0.001%, Newman et al 2016 Nat Biotech), and established analytical sensitivity of our custom MYD88 ddPCR via limiting dilution (~1%). These LODs met or exceeded the expected limit of sorting impurity by FACS (~1%). For 6 patients experiencing one or more DLBCL relapse, we deeply profiled 13 serial tumor biopsies by CAPP-Seq, and then assessed overlap in somatic mutations and VDJ sequences in biopsy pairs as additional indirect evidence implicating HSCs. Results: We obtained a median of ~2000 sorted HSCs and ~1700 sorted cells from differentiated lineages, and genotyped each population using one or more of the 3 direct genotyping methods described above. Three patients with sufficient cell numbers were profiled both by CAPP-Seq and either ddPCR (n=2) or qPCR (n=1). Surprisingly, we found no evidence implicating HSCs either directly or indirectly in any of the 16 patients, regardless of the assay employed or the cell types/lineages genotyped (e.g., Fig 1b). In 2 patients with MYD88 L265P mutations, we found evidence for MYD88+ B-cells with discordant light chains by ddPCR (~0.1%) potentially implicating common lymphoid precursors (CLPs), but found no evidence for similar involvement of T-cells or monocytes. In 6 DLBCL patients experiencing relapse, tumor pairs profiled by CAPP-Seq (median depth 957) shared 93% of somatic mutations (75-100%, Fig 1c). Such pairs invariably shared clonal IgH VDJ rearrangements (4/4, 100%), thus implicating a common progenitor arising in later stages of B-cell development, not HSCs. Conclusions: We find no evidence to implicate HSCs in the derivation of DLBCL. While formal demonstration of absence of pre-malignant HSCs in DLBCL would require overcoming practical and technical limitations (including number of available HSCs, sorting purity, and genotyping sensitivity), the pattern of shared somatic alterations at relapse makes this highly unlikely. We speculate that unlike lymphoid leukemias, the cell-of-origin for most DLBCLs reside later in B-lymphopoiesis, beyond CLPs. Figure. (a) HSC sorting from BM by FACS (b) Allele frequencies of mutations found by CAPP-Seq in an examplary DLBCL case (x-axis) compared to the same variants in HSCs (y-axis). (c) Phylogenetic trees of DLBCL patients experiencing relapse (n=6) with tumor pairs sequenced by CAPP-Seq. Shown are the evolutionary distances between (i) germline and common inferrable progenitor (CIP) illustrating the fraction of shared mutations between tumor pairs, and (ii) CIP and both diagnostic (tumor 1) and relapse tumors (tumor 2) indicating unique mutations to each tumor. Figure. (a) HSC sorting from BM by FACS (b) Allele frequencies of mutations found by CAPP-Seq in an examplary DLBCL case (x-axis) compared to the same variants in HSCs (y-axis). (c) Phylogenetic trees of DLBCL patients experiencing relapse (n=6) with tumor pairs sequenced by CAPP-Seq. Shown are the evolutionary distances between (i) germline and common inferrable progenitor (CIP) illustrating the fraction of shared mutations between tumor pairs, and (ii) CIP and both diagnostic (tumor 1) and relapse tumors (tumor 2) indicating unique mutations to each tumor. Disclosures Newman: Roche: Consultancy. Levy:Kite Pharma: Consultancy; Five Prime Therapeutics: Consultancy; Innate Pharma: Consultancy; Beigene: Consultancy; Corvus: Consultancy; Dynavax: Research Funding; Pharmacyclics: Research Funding. Diehn:Novartis: Consultancy; Quanticel Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy; Roche: Consultancy; Varian Medical Systems: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 103 (11) ◽  
pp. 4344-4352 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benny J. Chen ◽  
Xiuyu Cui ◽  
Gregory D. Sempowski ◽  
Jos Domen ◽  
Nelson J. Chao

Abstract In the current study, we tested whether higher numbers of hematopoietic stem cells correlate with the speed of immune reconstitution in a congenic transplantation model (C57BL/Ka, CD45.1, Thy1.1→C57BL/6, CD45.2, Thy1.2) using purified hematopoietic stem cells (c-Kit+Thy1.1lowLin-/lowSca-1+). There were 3 different doses of stem cells used (400, 1000, and 5000). Phenotypic analyses in peripheral blood and spleen demonstrated that higher numbers of infused stem cells are associated with more rapid regeneration of T cells (CD4+, CD8+, naive CD4+, naive CD8+) and B cells at early time points. The numbers of T and B cells eventually became equivalent between different dose groups at late time points. Production of interleukin-2 and inter-feron-γ per T cell was similar regardless of stem cell dose even when tested at the time when there were significant differences in peripheral T-cell counts. The improved immune recovery was attributed to a more rapid regeneration of donor-type immune cells. Higher numbers of total thymocytes and signal joint T-cell receptor excision circles were observed in the higher dose stem cell recipients, suggesting that accelerated regeneration of T cells was due to enhanced thymopoiesis. (Blood. 2004;103:4344-4352)


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 3197-3197
Author(s):  
Takamasa Katagiri ◽  
Zhirong Qi ◽  
Yu Kiyu ◽  
Naomi Sugimori ◽  
J. Luis Espinoza ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3197 Poster Board III-134 Small populations of glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein (GPI-AP)-deficient blood cells are often detectable in the peripheral blood (PB) of patients with aplastic anemia (AA) and refractory anemia (RA) of myelodysplastic syndromes defined by the FAB classification. Such PNH-type cells are thought to be derived from PIG-A mutant hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that avoid the immunological attack against HSCs. Inefficient T cell responses to PNH-type cells were indeed demonstrated by a murine study. However, there is no direct evidence in support of the escape theory concerning the expansion of PIG-A mutant HSCs in such patients with bone marrow (BM) failure. If the escape theory is true, the PNH-type cells should be detected in myeloid cells derived from HSCs that are targeted by the immune system attack. The PB of 527 patients with BM failure was examined for the presence of GPI-AP deficient cells in various lineages of cells including granulocytes, erythrocytes, monocytes, T cells, B cells, and NK cells using high sensitivity flow cytometry to verify this hypothesis. PNH-type cells were detectable in at least one lineage of cells from 228 (43%) patients. Although most of the positive patients showed PNH-type cells in two or more lineages including granulocytes or monocytes, 14 patients (13 with AA and 1 with amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia) displayed PNH-type CD48-CD55-CD59- cells only in T cells at a frequency of 0.003-0.3% of the total T cells (Figure). The PNH-type T cells were undetectable in any of 25 healthy individuals. The CD48-CD55-CD59- T cells consisted of predominantly effector memory and terminal effector memory cells with naïve phenotype cells. The phenotypic pattern of the PNH-type T cells was very similar to that of CD48-CD55-CD59- T cells from 11 patients with florid PNH but was different from that of CD48-CD55-CD59- T cells (central and effector memory cells alone) detected in 4 marrow transplant recipients who received anti-CD52 antibody (alemtuzumab) therapy as conditioning. PIG-A gene analyses of CD48-CD55-CD59- T cells revealed a single mutation in 2 patients with PNH-type T cells alone, while two different mutations were revealed in 2 patients treated with alemtuzumab. BM failure patients with PNH-type T cells alone and other BM failure patients possessing PNH-type granulocytes or monocytes showed similar clinical features characterized by predominant thrombocytopenia and good response to immunosuppressive therapy, thus suggesting an increase in the number of PNH-type cells in both groups to be associated with a similar immune pathophysiology. The escape theory cannot account for the presence of PNH-type cells exclusively in T cells in immune-mediated BM failure because T cell precursors are not the target of the immune system attack in AA. Therefore, mechanisms other than the escape theory must be considered for the initial proliferation of PIG-A mutant HSCs associated with the development of AA, such as preferential activation of dormant PIG-A mutant HSCs or T cell precursors due to the deficiency of GPI-APs that transmit negative signal Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 132 (6) ◽  
pp. 565-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanna Leins ◽  
Medhanie Mulaw ◽  
Karina Eiwen ◽  
Vadim Sakk ◽  
Ying Liang ◽  
...  

Key Points Phenotypic and functional changes in T and B cells of old mice are primarily driven by aging of HSCs. CASIN-treated aged HSCs reconstitute an immune system with a function similar to that in young animals.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 3545-3545
Author(s):  
Pelu Tran ◽  
Antonia MS Mueller ◽  
Judith Shizuru

Abstract Abstract 3545 Poster Board III-482 Standing in the line of first defense, the liver is a critical immunocompetent organ. It is armed with lymphocytes, including T cells (TC), natural killer (NK) cells, NK T cells, and a variety of antigen-presenting cells (APC), such as dendritic cells and resident macrophages (Mph), called Kupffer cells. Because it is exposed to large amounts of toxins and antigens, both destructive and harmless, liver immunity must provide immunogenic and tolerogenic mechanisms. Moreover, as the organ of fetal blood production the liver can, if required, resume its hematopoietic function. Here, we studied the role of the liver as a hematopoietic and lymphatic organ after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). Lethally irradiated BALB.K and BALB.B mice were given MHC-matched, FACS purified hematopoietic stem cells (HSC; cKit+Sca1+Thy1.1loLin-) from AKR/J and C57BL/6 donors, respectively, alone or supplemented with 10∧7 splenocytes (SP) for GVHD induction. Mononuclear cells (MNC) were Ficoll-separated from flushed livers 1 to 6 weeks (w) post transplant (pTX) and FACS analyzed. In recipients of TC-containing grafts, the liver was a major target organ of acute graft-vs-host disease (GVHD) with prominent donor lymphocyte expansion causing destruction of the hepatic portal morphology. Rare HSC-derived cells were observed in the livers. In contrast, mice given purified HSC showed no clinical or histological signs of GVHD, yet early pTX a high proportion of donor HSC-derived MNC was observed within the livers, comprising ∼75% of the MNC at 2w. Phenotype analysis revealed that these HSC-derived MNC were primarily NK cells (DX5+CD122+) or Mph (Mac1+F4/80+). In fact, amongst all nucleated cells, NK cells represented >10% and were mixed donor/host type. Interestingly, the Mph were all donor derived. This observation of over-representation by cells of innate immunity (including NK cells and Mph) in livers of recipients of HSC alone led us to hypothesize that these cells might exert protective functions against increased amounts of pathogens and toxins entering the circulation from irradiation-damaged intestines. Thus, to suppress donor Mph reconstitution pTX, silica was injected intraperitoneally on d-1, and every 3d thereafter. All recipients of HSC alone recovered rapidly after irradiation (d5-7), while at this time point recipients of HSC plus silica showed severe weight loss, hunched posture, ruffled fur, diarrhea, with <50% (7/15) survival. These survivors clinically stabilized around d12, suggesting that the intestines recovered from injury. To test if the presence of the HSC derived NK cells and APC could contribute to host protection from GVHD, a lethal dose of SP (10∧7) was injected simultaneously with HSC, or with a delay of 7d or 9d. All mice given SP on d0 died within 9d and 3/5 of those receiving SP on d7 died by d12. However, all mice given SP on d9 recovered fully and showed no signs of GVHD, despite the lymphopenic host environment that usually promotes homeostatic expansion of mature donor TC. In conclusion, the role of the liver as an immunologically active organ after ‘conventional’ HCT is often masked by donor TC expansion with subsequent GVHD. Here, we provide evidence that if grafts are devoid of mature lymphoid cells, innate immunity recovers rapidly, and in fact exceeds unmanipulated controls. Donor Mph may protect the host from pathogens and endotoxemia. Moreover, they may neutralize activated donor TC and thereby mediate tolerance between donor and host. Likewise, the elevated proportion of donor and host NK cells, which is lacking in GVHD affected mice, suggest another beneficial mechanism of protection, as NK cells have been reported to be capable of reducing GVHD. Immunohistochemical studies for a better quantitative assessment of resident immune cells in the liver pTX are underway. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 99 (10) ◽  
pp. 3566-3572 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc H. Dahlke ◽  
Oliver S. Lauth ◽  
Mark D. Jäger ◽  
Till Roeseler ◽  
Kai Timrott ◽  
...  

Anti-CD45 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are potentially powerful tools for the depletion of mature leukocytes. As their application for immunotherapy also depends on their effects on bone marrow (BM) progeny, the in vivo effects of an anti-CD45 mAb (anti-RT7a mAb) on BM precursor cells were analyzed in a rat model. Anti-RT7a mAb treatment was performed in LEW.1W (RT1u RT7a) rats with the use of different dosages. In addition, major histocompatibility complex (MHC)–congenic BM transplantation making use of a diallelic polymorphism (RT7a/RT7b) of rat CD45 was applied. Following injection of anti-RT7a mAb into normal LEW.1W rats, T cells were profoundly depleted in blood, lymph nodes, and spleen, whereas B cells were coated only by the antibody. Single injection of anti-RT7a mAb in a high dose induced a lethal aplastic syndrome with severe thrombocytopenia. Rescue of antibody-treated animals with BM from congenic LEW.1W-7B rats (RT1u RT7b) and transplantation of BM from LEW.1W rats pretreated with anti-RT7a mAb into sublethally irradiated LEW.1W-7B recipients revealed a profound effect of the mAb on progeny of myeloid and T-cell lineage. Following repeated antibody treatment of stable mixed chimeras (RT7b/RT7a), very few RT7a-positive B cells were still detectable after 6 months and their number declined during the subsequent year. These observations show that this anti-RT7a mAb effectively depletes mature T cells as well as BM precursor cells of myeloid, T-cell, and thrombocytic lineage after in vivo application. In contrast, mature B cells are not depleted, but precursors also appear to be eliminated. Overall, the findings suggest that the anti-RT7a mAb efficiently depletes early rat hematopoietic stem cells.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. e13109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshinori Sato ◽  
Hiroshi Takata ◽  
Naoki Kobayashi ◽  
Sayaka Nagata ◽  
Naomi Nakagata ◽  
...  

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