Unmasking in vivo stem cell dynamics in mammary tissue and mammary tumors

10.33540/329 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Levina Geertruida Jacoba Scheele
2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (30) ◽  
pp. 17796-17807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toru Hiratsuka ◽  
Ignacio Bordeu ◽  
Gunnar Pruessner ◽  
Fiona M. Watt

Fluctuation in signal transduction pathways is frequently observed during mammalian development. However, its role in regulating stem cells has not been explored. Here we tracked spatiotemporal ERK MAPK dynamics in human epidermal stem cells. While stem cells and differentiated cells were distinguished by high and low stable basal ERK activity, respectively, we also found cells with pulsatile ERK activity. Transitions from Basalhi-Pulselo(stem) to Basalhi-Pulsehi, Basalmid-Pulsehi, and Basallo-Pulselo(differentiated) cells occurred in expanding keratinocyte colonies and in response to differentiation stimuli. Pharmacological inhibition of ERK induced differentiation only when cells were in the Basalmid-Pulsehistate. Basal ERK activity and pulses were differentially regulated by DUSP10 and DUSP6, leading us to speculate that DUSP6-mediated ERK pulse down-regulation promotes initiation of differentiation, whereas DUSP10-mediated down-regulation of mean ERK activity promotes and stabilizes postcommitment differentiation. Levels of MAPK1/MAPK3 transcripts correlated with DUSP6 and DUSP10 transcripts in individual cells, suggesting that ERK activity is negatively regulated by transcriptional and posttranslational mechanisms. When cells were cultured on a topography that mimics the epidermal−dermal interface, spatial segregation of mean ERK activity and pulses was observed. In vivo imaging of mouse epidermis revealed a patterned distribution of basal cells with pulsatile ERK activity, and down-regulation was linked to the onset of differentiation. Our findings demonstrate that ERK MAPK signal fluctuations link kinase activity to stem cell dynamics.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 4 (11) ◽  
pp. e8035 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Tiede ◽  
Leah A. Owens ◽  
Feng Li ◽  
Christina DeCoste ◽  
Yibin Kang

2013 ◽  
Vol 202 (6) ◽  
pp. 887-900 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michaela T. Niessen ◽  
Jeanie Scott ◽  
Julia G. Zielinski ◽  
Susanne Vorhagen ◽  
Panagiota A. Sotiropoulou ◽  
...  

The atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) is a key regulator of polarity and cell fate in lower organisms. However, whether mammalian aPKCs control stem cells and fate in vivo is not known. Here we show that loss of aPKCλ in a self-renewing epithelium, the epidermis, disturbed tissue homeostasis, differentiation, and stem cell dynamics, causing progressive changes in this tissue. This was accompanied by a gradual loss of quiescent hair follicle bulge stem cells and a temporary increase in proliferating progenitors. Lineage tracing analysis showed that loss of aPKCλ altered the fate of lower bulge/hair germ stem cells. This ultimately led to loss of proliferative potential, stem cell exhaustion, alopecia, and premature aging. Inactivation of aPKCλ produced more asymmetric divisions in different compartments, including the bulge. Thus, aPKCλ is crucial for homeostasis of self-renewing stratifying epithelia, and for the regulation of cell fate, differentiation, and maintenance of epidermal bulge stem cells likely through its role in balancing symmetric and asymmetric division.


eLife ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Werner ◽  
Fabian Beier ◽  
Sebastian Hummel ◽  
Stefan Balabanov ◽  
Lisa Lassay ◽  
...  

We investigate the in vivo patterns of stem cell divisions in the human hematopoietic system throughout life. In particular, we analyze the shape of telomere length distributions underlying stem cell behavior within individuals. Our mathematical model shows that these distributions contain a fingerprint of the progressive telomere loss and the fraction of symmetric cell proliferations. Our predictions are tested against measured telomere length distributions in humans across all ages, collected from lymphocyte and granulocyte sorted telomere length data of 356 healthy individuals, including 47 cord blood and 28 bone marrow samples. We find an increasing stem cell pool during childhood and adolescence and an approximately maintained stem cell population in adults. Furthermore, our method is able to detect individual differences from a single tissue sample, i.e. a single snapshot. Prospectively, this allows us to compare cell proliferation between individuals and identify abnormal stem cell dynamics, which affects the risk of stem cell related diseases.


Blood ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 122 (21) ◽  
pp. 4615-4615 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicoletta Cieri ◽  
Jacopo Peccatori ◽  
Giacomo Oliveira ◽  
Raffaella Greco ◽  
Sarah Marktel ◽  
...  

Haploidentical hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) with T–replete grafts and post-transplant cyclophosphamide (PT-Cy) has gained much interest in the transplantation community for the low rates of GvHD, non-relapse mortality and opportunistic infections. This platform, devoid of anti-thymocyte globulins, allows a thorough analysis of circulating cells in the early phase post-HSCT. Indeed, several biological events that play a critical role for transplant outcome occur within the first month after HSCT; while engraftment and hematological reconstitution are carefully monitored, the shape of T cell dynamics within this timeframe remains largely unknown. We characterized immune reconstitution (IR) during the first month post HSCT in 18 high-risk leukemia patients receiving myeloablative conditioning, T-replete haploidentical peripheral blood stem cell graft (PBSCs), and GvHD prophylaxis consisting of PT-Cy (day 3, 4), followed by mycophenolate mofetil and sirolimus from day 5. Infused PBSCs and blood samples harvested at day 1, 3, 5, 8, 15 and 30 post HSCT were analyzed by multiparametric flow cytometry. T cells were infused in the absence of immunosuppressive agents, and by day 3, prior to PT-Cy, a large fraction of memory lymphocytes, possibly enriched for allo-specificities, proliferated (assessed by Ki-67 staining). Conversely, naïve T cells (TN) were scantly Ki-67+ (P< 0.001). A high CD4:CD8 ratio was observed at this time-point (10). PT-Cy efficiently abated T cell proliferation and appeared to affect CD4 more than CD8 T cells. Nevertheless, T cell numbers progressively increased (mean CD3 counts, day 5: 19 cells/µL; day 8: 27 cells/µL; day 15: 97 cells/µL), suggesting that residual proliferation in extravascular sites was likely to fuel the surge in circulating T cells. Consistently, we observed an expansion of antigen-experienced T cells including central memory (TCM), effector memory (TEM), effectors (TEFF) and the recently described stem memory T cells (TSCM). TSCM are a subset of memory cells hierarchically superior to TCM and TEM, for self-renewal, long-term persistence and functional capacity. Similarly to TN, TSCM coexpress CD45RA and CD62L but differently from TN, TSCM express CD95, a marker of memory cells. As early as day 8 post HSCT, the T cell compartment was predominantly composed by TSCM cells (P < 0.01 compared to all other subsets). Such enrichment in TSCM was not due to a selective resistance to PT-Cy, as suggested by the lack of activity of the ALDH enzyme, which converts Cy to a non-toxic metabolite, in TSCM infused with the graft. Rather, we hypothesized that TSCM expansion came directly from the differentiation of TN infused within the graft, which escaped the purging effect of PT-Cy thanks to a delayed activation kinetics compared to alloreactive memory T cells. We demonstrated the in vivo differentiation of WT1 and PRAME specific TN cells, present in the graft, into memory lymphocytes, comprising TSCM cells, in 4/7 patients suitable for dextramer tracking. Such tumor specific T cells were detected in the peripheral blood and bone marrow of treated patients, suggesting that PT-Cy did not hamper GvL players. Of note in the remaining patients for whom tumor-specific TN were not detectable in the graft, no tumor response could be documented in vivo. From day 15 post HSCT, TSCM were outnumbered by other memory subsets, suggesting their differentiation into more committed TCM TEM and TEFF. The quality of IR correlated with clinical events. The percentage of circulating Ki-67+ CD8 TEMcells at day 8 post HSCT accurately predicted the occurrence of periengraftment syndrome, observed in 4 patients with a median time to onset of 15 days. Acute GvHD (Grade I/II in 6 patients, grade III/IV in 4) was accompanied by a rise in circulating Ki-67+ CD8 cells, and response to therapy resulted in a drop in Ki-67 expression. No immunological parameter correlated with chronic GvHD, observed in 2 patients. In all patients with a CMV-seropositive donor, CMV-specific T cells were tracked in the graft, at early time-points and up to 180 days post HSCT, indicating that virus-specific T cells escaped PT-Cy. These results suggest that PT-Cy acts mainly on alloreactive memory T cells infused within the graft, while sparing infused virus-specific, non cross-reactive, memory cells and TN, which can differentiate predominantly in TSCM, but also in TCM TEM and TEFF, thus promoting a rapid and broad IR. Disclosures: Bonini: MolMed SpA: Consultancy.


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (8) ◽  
pp. 2214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tuba Yilmaz ◽  
Fatma Ates Alkan

This work investigates the in vivo dielectric properties of healthy and benign rat mammary tissues in an attempt to expand the dielectric property knowledge of animal models. The outcomes of this study can enable testing of microwave medical technologies on animal models and interpretation of tissue alteration-dependent in vivo dielectric properties of mammary tissues. Towards this end, in vivo dielectric properties of healthy rat mammary tissues and chemically induced benign rat mammary tumors including low-grade adenosis, sclerosing adenosis, and adenosis were collected with open-ended coaxial probes from 500 MHz to 18 GHz. The in vivo measurements revealed that the dielectric properties of benign rat mammary tumors are higher than the healthy rat mammary tissues by 9.3% to 35.5% and 19.6% to 48.7% for relative permittivity and conductivity, respectively. Furthermore, to our surprise, we found that the grade of the benign tissue affects the dielectric properties for this study. Finally, a comparison with ex vivo healthy human mammary tissue dielectric properties revealed that the healthy rat mammary tissues best replicate the dielectric properties of healthy medium density human samples.


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