Faculty Opinions recommendation of Identification of a stroma-mediated Wnt/beta-catenin signal promoting self-renewal of hematopoietic stem cells in the stem cell niche.

Author(s):  
Robert AJ Oostendorp
Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 2208-2208
Author(s):  
Young-Ju Kang ◽  
Eek-hoon Jho ◽  
Hanjun Kim ◽  
Gyeongsin Park ◽  
Jae-Seung Shim ◽  
...  

Abstract With contrasting results recently reported on the effects of b-catenin on hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), the precise role of Wnt on HSC regulation remains in question. Here, we show that Wnt-b-catenin signaling triggers distinct biological effects on HSCs depending on the target of activation within the hematopoietic microenvironment. Retroviral transduction of a stable form of b-catenin into HSCs caused a loss of competitive repopulating units (CRUs) in a limiting-dilution assay, whereas stabilized b-catenin in stromal cells CRU frequencies of co-cultured HSCs with higher preservation of undifferentiated state and caused enhanced levels of reconstitution in a manner dependent on direct contact between HSC and stroma. The enhancing effect of b-catenin stabilized stroma on HSC was also observed for human HSCs exhibiting higher frequencies of lympho-myeloid repopulating cells after transplantation into NOD/SCID mice. Interestingly, gene expression patterns of Wnt signaling molecules revealed compartmentalization in a manner that canonical Wnt ligands were preferentially expressed in the hematopoietic cells while molecules for reception of the signal such as Frizzled receptors or their co-receptors are preferentially expressed in stromal component, suggesting the role of stromal component as a target of Wnt signals in the niche. Furthermore, b-catenin accumulated selectively in the endosteal stroma of the trabecule region in “stressed” marrows, but not in “steady-state” marrows. Taken together, these results suggest stroma-mediated Wnt signals may function as microenvironmental cues for HSC self-renewal in the stem cell niche.


Stem Cells ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 1318-1329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-A Kim ◽  
Young-Ju Kang ◽  
Gyeongsin Park ◽  
Myungshin Kim ◽  
Young-Ok Park ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (8) ◽  
pp. 3026-3035 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Jacques Lataillade ◽  
Olivier Pierre-Louis ◽  
Hans Carl Hasselbalch ◽  
Georges Uzan ◽  
Claude Jasmin ◽  
...  

Abstract Primary myelofibrosis (PMF) is the rarest and the most severe Philadelphia-negative chronic myeloproliferative syndrome. By associating a clonal proliferation and a mobilization of hematopoietic stem cells from bone marrow to spleen with profound alterations of the stroma, PMF is a remarkable model in which deregulation of the stem cell niche is of utmost importance for the disease development. This paper reviews key data suggesting that an imbalance between endosteal and vascular niches participates in the development of clonal stem cell proliferation. Mechanisms by which bone marrow niches are altered with ensuing mobilization and homing of neoplastic hematopoietic stem cells in new or reinitialized niches in the spleen and liver are examined. Differences between signals delivered by both endosteal and vascular niches in the bone marrow and spleen of patients as well as the responsiveness of PMF stem cells to their specific signals are discussed. A proposal for integrating a potential role for the JAK2 mutation in their altered sensitivity is made. A better understanding of the cross talk between stem cells and their niche should imply new therapeutic strategies targeting not only intrinsic defects in stem cell signaling but also regulatory hematopoietic niche–derived signals and, consequently, stem cell proliferation.


Blood ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 110 (11) ◽  
pp. 4046-4046 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Cross ◽  
Rudiger Alt ◽  
Lydia Schnapke-Hille ◽  
Thomas Riemer ◽  
Dietger Niederwieser

Abstract The hematopoietic stem cell niche presents a localised environment supporting the balanced maintenance, self-renewal and occasional expansion of the stem cell pool. These options are widely assumed to be regulated exclusively by signalling from specific combinations of stroma-bound or soluble ligands. However, a consideration of the rare conditions under which absolute numbers of stem cells increase in vivo as well as the selective pressures acting on regenerative systems during evolution has led us to propose a metabolic component to the stem cell niche which serves to limit cumulative damage, to avoid the selection of potentially oncogenic mutations and to tie symmetric division to slow proliferation. This would mean that traditional cell culture media based on “systemic” substrates such as glucose and glutamine may actively prevent the symmetric amplification of high quality stem cells, offering a possible explanation for the limited success in this area to date. To investigate this possibility, we have examined the effects of range of carbon and energy sources on the proliferation and maintenance of stem and progenitor cells. Our strategy is to screen a wide variety of culture conditions using murine FDCPmix cells, which are non-tumorigenic but have an innate tendency to amplify symmetrically in the presence of IL-3, and then to test key observations in human UCB CD133+ cells provided with SCF, TPO and FLT-3L. In both cell systems, we do indeed find an unusually low requirement for the systemic substrates glucose and glutamine normally included as major energy and carbon sources in cell culture media. Reducing glucose reduces the yield of committed cells from CD133+ cultures without affecting the accumulation of CD133+CD34+cKit+ progenitors. When provided with alternative substrates more likely to reflect a “niche” type environment, FDCPmix cells can be maintained for long periods in media containing only the trace levels of glucose or glutamine derived from dialysed serum, and show improved self-renewal under these conditions. We have also found that raising osmolarity reduces glucose dependence and simultaneously favours the maintenance both of self-renewing CFU (FDCPmix culture) and of CAFCweek13 (CD133+ culture). In parallel, the use of NMR and mass spectrometry techniques to profile intracellular metabolites in self-renewing and differentiating FDCPmix cells reveals a shift in the metabolite balance indicating reduced glycolysis in the early cells. Taken together, these results suggest that hematopoietic stem cells do indeed have remarkable metabolic characteristics consistent with adaptation to a metabolically limiting niche environment. It may therefore be necessary to identify niche substrates and to combine these with the relevant signalling environment in vitro in order to effectively increase stem cell numbers for research, stem cell transplantation and tissue engineering applications.


2008 ◽  
Vol 43 (11) ◽  
pp. 974-980 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Wagner ◽  
Patrick Horn ◽  
Simone Bork ◽  
Anthony D. Ho

Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 90
Author(s):  
Pilar Carreras ◽  
Itziar González ◽  
Miguel Gallardo ◽  
Alejandra Ortiz-Ruiz ◽  
Maria Luz Morales ◽  
...  

We previously reported a new approach for micromanipulation and encapsulation of human stem cells using a droplet-based microfluidic device. This approach demonstrated the possibility of encapsulating and culturing difficult-to-preserve primary human hematopoietic stem cells using an engineered double-layered bead composed by an inner layer of alginate and an outer layer of Puramatrix. We also demonstrated the maintenance and expansion of Multiple Myeloma cells in this construction. Here, the presented microfluidic technique is applied to construct a 3D biomimetic model to recapitulate the human hematopoietic stem cell niche using double-layered hydrogel beads cultured in 10% FBS culture medium. In this model, the long-term maintenance of the number of cells and expansion of hHSCS encapsulated in the proposed structures was observed. Additionally, a phenotypic characterization of the human hematopoietic stem cells generated in the presented biomimetic model was performed in order to assess their long-term stemness maintenance. Results indicate that the ex vivo cultured human CD34+ cells from bone marrow were viable, maintained, and expanded over a time span of eight weeks. This novel long-term stem cell culture methodology could represent a novel breakthrough to improve Hematopoietic Progenitor cell Transplant (HPT) as well as a novel tool for further study of the biochemical and biophysical factors influencing stem cell behavior. This technology opens a myriad of new applications as a universal stem cell niche model potentially able to expand other types of cells.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 1400-1400
Author(s):  
Randolf Forkert ◽  
Yon Ko ◽  
Thomas Neuhaus ◽  
Elisabeth Gruenewald ◽  
Silke Schoeneborn ◽  
...  

Abstract Stem cells reside in a physical microenvironment or niche where a balance of signals controls their proliferation, differentiation and death. Components of the specialized microenvironment have generally been defined in terms of cells and signaling pathways affecting stem cell maintenance or expansion. We have defined a role for a matrix glycoprotein that provides a constraining function on hematopoietic stem cells within the bone marrow microenvironment. Osteopontin (OPN) is an abundant glycoprotein in bone that modifies primitive hematopoietic cell number and function in a stem cell non-autonomous manner. Here we analyzed the role of OPN for regulating stem cell mobilization and pool size in times of G-CSF induced marrow stress, a context close to the clinical setting of stem cell mobilization not well understood so far. Bone marrow stromal cells show an enhanced expression of OPN under stimulation with G-CSF, which prompted us to analyze the role of OPN in G-CSF mediated activation of the stem cell niche. First we treated OPN deficient mice and their wild-type littermates with G-CSF for 5 days. We could observe a significant increased stem cell fraction in the peripheral blood and in the bone marrow in the absence of OPN in comparison to the wild-type controls. To evaluate, if this effect is stroma dependent, we first transplanted wild-type bone marrow into wild-type or OPN-deficient recipients. 6 weeks after transplantation we treated these mice with G-CSF for 5 days and analyzed the peripheral blood and the bone marrow for the contents of primitive hematopoietic cells. Here we could detect a significantly increased stem cell fraction in peripheral blood and bone marrow of the OPN−/− recipients in comparison to wild type controls detected by FACS and functional in vitro stem cell assays. We then transplanted the stressed bone marrow in a competitive repopulation assay into wild-type recipients and observed a significant increase of CD45.2 cells from OPN−/− recipient mice up to 12 weeks after transplantation in comparison to wild-type controls, demonstrating an enhanced G-CSF induced expansion of hematopioetic stem cells in the OPN-deficient stem cell niche. Furthermore, we could observe an enhanced expression of Angiopoietin and N-Cadherin in OPN-deficient bone marrow stromal cells after stimulation with G-CSF in comparison to wild-type controls, supporting the stroma dependent expansion of stem cells in the absence of OPN in the G-CSF stimulated stem cell niche. Therefore, OPN is a restricting element of the stem cell niche limiting the size of the stem cell pool and may provide a dynamic mechanism by which excess stem cell expansion is prevented during times of niche stimulation. These findings may provide new insight into expansion and mobilization of hematopoietic stem cells by G-CSF mediated by components of the stem cell niche.


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