Faculty Opinions recommendation of IGF and FGF cooperatively establish the regulatory stem cell niche of pluripotent human cells in vitro.

Author(s):  
Randall Moon
Nature ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 448 (7157) ◽  
pp. 1015-1021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sean C. Bendall ◽  
Morag H. Stewart ◽  
Pablo Menendez ◽  
Dustin George ◽  
Kausalia Vijayaragavan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 27 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S7-S8
Author(s):  
Safina Gadeock ◽  
Cambrian Liu ◽  
Brent Polk

Abstract Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is a highly expressed cytokine in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Although TNF can induce colonic epithelial dysfunction and apoptosis, recent studies suggest that TNF signalling promotes epithelial wound repair and stem cell function. Here we investigated the role of TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1) in mediating TNF’s effects on colonic epithelial stem cells, integral to mucosal healing in colitis. We demonstrate that Tnfr1-/- mice exhibit loss in Lgr5 expression (-52%, p<0.02; N=6) compared to wildtype (WT) controls. However, the opposite result was found in vitro, wherein murine Tnfr1-/- colonoids demonstrated a significant increase in Lgr5 expression (66%, p<0.007; N=6) compared to WT colonoids. Similarly, human colonoids treated with an anti-TNFR1 antibody also demonstrated an increase in Lgr5 expression, relative to IgG controls. To resolve the contradiction in the in vivo versus in vitro environment, we hypothesized that mesenchymal TNFR1 expression regulates the epithelial stem cell niche. To determine the relationships between these cell types, we co-cultured WT or Tnfr1-/- colonoids with WT or Tnfr1-/- colonic myofibroblasts (CMFs). We found that epithelial Lgr5 expression was significantly higher (by 52%, p<0.05; N=3) when co-cultured with WT compared to TNFR1-/- myofibroblasts. The loss of TNFR1 expression in vivo increases the number of αSMA+ mesenchymal cells by nearly 56% (N=6) but considerably reduces the pericryptal PDGFRα+ cells, suggesting modifications in mesenchymal populations that contribute to the epithelial stem cell niche. Functionally, primary Tnfr1-/--CMFs displayed PI3k (p<0.001; N=3) and MAPK (p<0.01; N=3)-dependent increases in migration, proliferation, and differentiation, but RNA profiling demonstrated by diminished levels of stem cell niche factors, Rspo3 (-80%, p<0.0001; N=6) and Wnt2b (-63%, p<0.008; N=6) compared to WT-CMFs. Supplementation with 50ng recombinant Rspo3 for 5 d to Lgr5-GFP organoids co-cultured with TNFR1-/--CMFs restored Lgr5 expression to wildtype levels. Therefore, TNFR1-mediated TNF signalling in mesenchymal cells promotes their ability to support an epithelial stem cell niche. These results should motivate future studies of the stem cell niche in the context of long-term treatment with anti-TNF therapies.


2022 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Patrick Wuchter ◽  
Anke Diehlmann ◽  
Harald Klüter

<b><i>Background:</i></b> The stem cell niche in human bone marrow provides scaffolds, cellular frameworks and essential soluble cues to support the stemness of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). To decipher this complex structure and the corresponding cellular interactions, a number of in vitro model systems have been developed. The cellular microenvironment is of key importance, and mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) represent one of the major cellular determinants of the niche. Regulation of the self-renewal and differentiation of HSPCs requires not only direct cellular contact and adhesion molecules, but also various cytokines and chemokines. The C-X-C chemokine receptor type 4/stromal cell-derived factor 1 axis plays a pivotal role in stem cell mobilization and homing. As we have learned in recent years, to realistically simulate the physiological in vivo situation, advanced model systems should be based on niche cells arranged in a three-dimensional (3D) structure. By providing a dynamic rather than static setup, microbioreactor systems offer a number of advantages. In addition, the role of low oxygen tension in the niche microenvironment and its impact on hematopoietic stem cells need to be taken into account and are discussed in this review. <b><i>Summary:</i></b> This review focuses on the role of MSCs as a part of the bone marrow niche, the interplay between MSCs and HSPCs and the most important regulatory factors that need to be considered when engineering artificial hematopoietic stem cell niche systems. <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> Advanced 3D model systems using MSCs as niche cells and applying microbioreactor-based technology are capable of simulating the natural properties of the bone marrow niche more closely than ever before.


2010 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 537-546 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shona H. Lang ◽  
Elizabeth Anderson ◽  
Robert Fordham ◽  
Anne T. Collins

Blood ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 92 (12) ◽  
pp. 4641-4651 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pankaj Gupta ◽  
Theodore R. Oegema ◽  
Joseph J. Brazil ◽  
Arkadiusz Z. Dudek ◽  
Arne Slungaard ◽  
...  

Abstract Stem cell localization, conservation, and differentiation is believed to occur in niches in the marrow stromal microenvironment. Our recent observation that long-term in vitro human hematopoiesis requires a stromal heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) led us to hypothesize that such HSPG may orchestrate the formation of the stem cell niche. We compared the structure and function of HS from M2-10B4, a hematopoiesis-supportive cell line, with HS from a nonsupportive cell line, FHS-173-We. Long-term culture-initiating cell (LTC-IC) maintenance was enhanced by PG from supportive cells but not by PG from nonsupportive cells (P &lt; .005). The supportive HS were significantly larger and more highly sulfated than the nonsupportive HS. Specifically, supportive HS contained higher 6-O-sulfation on the glucosamine residues. In agreement with these observations, purified 6-O-sulfated heparin and highly 6-O-sulfated bovine kidney HS similarly maintained LTC-IC. In contrast, completely desulfated heparin, N-sulfated heparin, and unmodified heparin did not support LTC-IC maintenance. Moreover, the supportive HS promoted LTC-IC maintenance but not differentiation of CD34+/HLA-DR−cells into colony-forming cells (CFCs) and mature blood cells. The supportive HS but not the nonsupportive HS bound both cytokines and matrix components critical for hematopoiesis, including interleukin-3 (IL-3), macrophage inflammatory protein-1 (MIP-1), and thrombospondin (TSP). Significantly more CD34+ cells adhered directly to immobilized O-sulfated heparin than to N-sulfated or desulfated heparin. Thus, hematopoiesis-supportive stromal HSPG possessing large, highly 6-O-sulfated HS mediate the juxtaposition of hematopoietic progenitors with stromal cells, specific growth-promoting (IL-3) and growth-inhibitory (MIP-1 and platelet factor 4 [PF4]) cytokines, and extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins such as TSP. We conclude that the structural specificity of stromal HSPG that determines the selective colocalization of cytokines and ECM components leads to the formation of discrete niches, thereby orchestrating the controlled growth and differentiation of stem cells. These findings may have important implications for ex vivo expansion of and gene transfer into primitive hematopoietic progenitors.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 211-211
Author(s):  
Timothy S. Olson ◽  
Satoru Otsuru ◽  
Ted Hofmann ◽  
Edwin M. Horwitz

Abstract Abstract 211 Bone marrow (BM) radioablation produces structural changes in the endosteal osteoblastic stem cell niche, a critical site of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) engraftment following HSC transplantation (HSCT). We have previously shown that total body irradiation (TBI) in wildtype (WT) mice induces migration of recipient megakaryocytes to the niche and an expansion of niche osteoblasts that supports HSC engraftment following transplantation. We have also demonstrated that c-MPL-deficient (mpl−/−) recipients have decreases in total megakaryocytes (35% of WT), the percentage of megakaryocytes migrating to the endosteum (<20% of WT), and niche osteoblast expansion (<50% of WT) following TBI, leading to profound deficits in long-term (LT)-HSC engraftment following HSCT. We now present data examining mechanisms by which megakaryocytes facilitate both niche osteoblast expansion post-TBI and donor HSC engraftment following HSCT, and a therapeutic strategy utilizing these mechanisms to enhance donor HSC engraftment. The decrease in total megakaryocytes and absent thrombopoietin (TPO) signaling in mpl−/− mice resulted in a 90% reduction in post-TBI mpl−/− versus WT BM levels of platelet-derived growth factor beta (PDGFβ), a known osteoblast growth factor. In vitro, megakaryocytes cultured together or across a transwell membrane markedly enhanced osteoblast growth (> 2.5 fold, p < 0.001), but PDGFβ signaling inhibition completely abrogated megakaryocyte-driven osteoblast growth. In vivo, inhibition of PDGF receptor signaling in WT mice via imatinib treatment resulted in near complete blockade of TBI-induced osteoblast expansion, and imatinib treatment of primary recipients resulted in diminished LT-HSC engraftment in secondary transplant assays. Blockade of CD41 integrin-mediated adhesion of megakaryocytes in WT recipient BM blocked TBI-induced megakaryocyte migration to the endosteal niche and severely abrogated LT-HSC engraftment efficiency. However, in contrast to c-MPL deficiency, CD41 blockade did not decrease PDGFβ expression or niche osteoblast expansion, suggesting that in addition to PDGFβ-dependent effects on niche expansion, the megakaryocyte migration to the niche itself is also required to efficiently engraft HSC. Mice with decreased GATA-1 expression (Gata-1tm2sho/J), have a large increase in total BM megakaryocytes a >2-fold (p < 0.001) increase in PDGFβ levels, and greatly increased expansion of osteoblast and other mesenchymal elements 48 hours post-TBI compared to WT mice. However, Gata-1tm2sho/J megakaryocytes have known defective terminal differentiation and function including decreased platelet production, and Gata-1tm2sho/J primary recipients did not engraft LT-HSC more efficiently than WT primary recipients, demonstrating the need for fully functional megakaryocytes, and not only increased PDGFβ-induced mesenchymal proliferation, to foster HSC engraftment. Finally, we have examined whether TPO administration prior to radioablation and HSCT can enhance host megakaryocyte effects on the niche and HSC engraftment. TPO administration for 5 days prior to radioablation, resulted in a significant increase in BM megakaryocytes and a 50% increase in niche osteoblast expansion. Furthermore, competitive secondary transplantation assays demonstrated that TPO- versus sham-treatment of primary recipients prior to TBI and BM transplant, resulted in increased initial engraftment at 24 hours post-primary transplant (40% increase, p < 0.05) increased short-term HSC and progenitor engraftment 3–6 weeks following secondary transplant (4–20 fold increase, p < 0.02), and sustained LT-HSC engraftment at 28 weeks post-transplant in 47% versus 7% (p < 0.05) of secondary recipients of TPO- versus sham-treated primary recipient BM, respectively. Taken together, our results demonstrate that host megakaryocytes facilitate efficient HSC engraftment following TBI and HSCT through PDGFβ-dependent enhancement of niche osteoblast expansion and through direct interactions of megakaryocytes with the niche. TPO-treatment of transplant recipients prior to radioablation and stem cell infusion enhances these megakaryocyte-dependent pathways and subsequent donor HSC engraftment efficiency, providing a clinically applicable strategy to enhance niche function and stem cell engraftment following clinical transplantation. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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