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1.
The chemokine, stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF1), is produced in the bone marrow and has been shown to modulate the homing of stem cells to this site by mediating chemokinesis and chemotaxis. Therefore, it was hypothesized that elevation of SDF1 level in the peripheral circulation would result in mobilization of primitive hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. SDF1 plasma level was increased by intravenous injection of an adenoviral vector expressing SDF1alpha (AdSDF1) into severe combined immunodeficient mice. This resulted in a 10-fold increase in leukocyte count, a 3-fold increase in platelets, and mobilization of progenitors, including colony-forming units-granulocyte-macrophage to the peripheral circulation. In addition, AdSDF1 induced mobilization of cells with stem cell potential, including colony-forming units in spleen and long-term reconstituting cells. These data demonstrate that overexpression of SDF1 in the peripheral circulation results in the mobilization of hematopoietic cells with repopulating capacity, progenitor cells, and precursor cells. These studies lay the foundation for using SDF1 to induce mobilization of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells in in vivo studies. (Blood. 2001;97:3354-3360)  相似文献   

2.
Regulatory mechanisms governing adhesion of hematopoietic progenitor cells to the stromal nische are poorly understood. Growth factors such as stem cell factor (SCF), granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, and thrombopoietin were reported to upregulate the adhesion of hematopoietic progenitors to immobilized fibronectin through activation of integrin alpha4beta1 and alpha5beta1. Macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1alpha is a C-C chemokine that suppresses colony formation by stem/progenitor cells in vitro. We asked if MIP-1alpha would modulate the adhesive phenotype of colony-forming cells (CFCs) obtained from healthy donor bone marrow (BM), cord blood (CB), and mobilized peripheral blood (mPB) CD34+ cells, in comparison with SCF, using immobilized fibronectin. SCF significantly increased the level of adhesion of CFCs from BM, CB, and mPB. On the other hand, MIP-1alpha significantly increased the level of adhesion of CFCs from BM and CB, but less so from mPB. The effects of MIP-1alpha were inhibited by blocking antibodies to integrin alpha4, alpha5, or beta1, and polymerization plus rearrangement of F-actin were observed in affected cells by labeling with rhodamine-conjugated phalloidine. These data indicate that the effect of MIP-1alpha on the adhesive phenotype of CFCs is mediated by modulation of the organization of integrin. The amount of MIP-1alpha receptor on mPB was less than for BM or CB, which may explain the distinct characteristics in the adhesive response induced by MIP-1alpha. We suggest that hematopoietic progenitor cells from different sources may be heterogeneous with respect to maturation, integrin affinity, MIP-1alpha receptor expression, and regulation of MIP-1alpha signaling. Our data indicate that MIP-1alpha may affect migration, homing, and mobilization of hematopoietic progenitors by modulating the adhesive phenotype of these cells.  相似文献   

3.
Most primitive hematopoietic cells appear to be normally quiescent in vivo, whereas their leukemic counterparts in patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) are maintained in a state of rapid turnover. This difference is also seen in the long-term culture system, where control of primitive hematopoietic progenitor proliferation is mediated by interactions of these cells with marrow-derived mesenchymal cells of the fibroblast lineage. We now show that exogenous addition of macrophage inflammatory protein 1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha) to normal long-term cultures can reversibly and specifically block the activation of "primitive" (high proliferative potential), but not "mature" (lower proliferative potential), progenitors in the adherent layer of these cultures. Moreover, addition of MIP-1 beta after primitive-progenitor activation can prevent the subsequent return of these cells to a quiescent state a few days later as shown previously in similar experiments using antibodies to transforming growth factor beta. This suggests that the level of MIP-1 alpha (or a related MIP-1 alpha agonist) produced in LTCs, like the level of transforming growth factor beta, may be necessary, but is not on its own sufficient, to mediate the inhibitory activity of the regulatory cells in the adherent layer. Addition of MIP-1 alpha to similar long-term cultures containing normal marrow adherent layers but supporting exclusively neoplastic (CML) hematopoiesis did not block the cycling of primitive neoplastic progenitors. A defect in the responsiveness of CML cells to MIP-1 alpha (or a similarly acting chemokine) would explain their deregulated proliferative behavior in this model and, by extrapolation to the in vivo setting, suggests a molecular mechanism whereby the leukemic clone may become amplified at the stem-cell level. In addition, these findings suggest approaches to the therapy of CML, using inhibitors such as MIP-1 alpha for the protection of primitive normal cells.  相似文献   

4.
Both transforming growth factor beta (TGF beta) and macrophage inflammatory protein 1 alpha (MIP-1 alpha) have been shown to be multifunctional regulators of hematopoiesis that can either inhibit or enhance the growth of hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPC). We report here the spectrum of activities of these two cytokines on different hematopoietic progenitor and stem cell populations, and whether these effects are direct or indirect. MIP-1 alpha enhances interleukin-3 (IL- 3)/and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM- CSF)/induced colony formation of normal bone marrow progenitor cells (BMC) and lineage-negative (Lin-) progenitors, but has no effect on G- CSF or CSF-1/induced colony formation. Similarly, TGF beta enhances GM- CSF/induced colony formation of normal BMC and Lin- progenitors. In contrast, TGF beta inhibits IL-3/ and CSF-1/induced colony formation of Lin- progenitors. The effects of MIP-1 alpha and TGF beta on the growth of Lin- progenitors were direct and correlate with colony formation in soft agar. Separation of the Lin- cells into Thy-1 and Thy-1lo subsets showed that the growth of Thy-1lo Lin- cells is directly inhibited by MIP-1 alpha and TGF beta regardless of the cytokine used to stimulate growth (IL-3), GM-CSF, or CSF-1). In contrast, two other stem cell populations (0% to 15% Hoechst 33342/Rhodamine 123 [Ho/Rh123] and Lin- Sca-1+ cells) were markedly inhibited by TGF beta and unaffected by MIP- 1 alpha. Furthermore, MIP-1 alpha has no effect on high proliferative potential colony-forming cells 1 or 2 (HPP-CFC/1 or /2) colony formation in vitro, whereas TGF beta inhibits both HPP-CFC/1 and HPP- CFC/2. Thus, MIP-1 alpha and TGF beta are direct bidirectional regulators of HPC growth, whose effects are dependent on other growth factors present as well as the maturational state of the HPC assayed. The spectrum of their inhibitory and enhancing activities shows overlapping yet distinct effects.  相似文献   

5.
Randall  TD; Lund  FE; Howard  MC; Weissman  IL 《Blood》1996,87(10):4057-4067
Using a monoclonal antibody to murine CD38, we showed that a population of adult bone marrow cells that expressed the markers Sca-1 and c-kit but lacked the lineage markers Mac-1, GR-1, B220, IgM, CD3, CD4, CD8 and CD5 could be subdivided by the expression of CD38. We showed that CD38high c-kit+ Sca-1+, linlow/-cells sorted from adult bone marrow cultured with interleukin-3 (IL-3), IL-6, and kit-L produced much larger colonies in liquid culture at a greater frequency than their CD38low/- counterparts. In addition, we found that CD36low/ - cells contained most of the day-12 colony-forming units-spleen (CFU-S) but were not long-term reconstituting cells, whereas the population that expressed higher levels of CD38 contained few, but significant, day-12 CFU-S and virtually all the long-term reconstituting stem cells. Interestingly, the CD38high Sca-1+ c-kit+ linlow/- cells isolated from day-E14.5 fetal liver were also found to be long-term reconstituting stem cells. This is in striking contrast to human hematopoietic progenitors in which the most primitive hematopoietic cells from fetal tissues lack the expression of CD38. Furthermore, because antibodies to CD38 could functionally replace antibodies to Thy-1.1 in a stem cell purification procedure, the use of anti-CD38 may be more generally applicable to the purification of hematopoietic stem cells from mouse strains that do not express the Thy-1.1 allele.  相似文献   

6.
Trevisan  M; Yan  XQ; Iscove  NN 《Blood》1996,88(11):4149-4158
This investigation was directed at separating long-term reconstituting (LTR) stem cells in normal murine marrow from hematopoietic precursors detectable in short-term assays in vitro and in vivo, and then at determining whether purified LTR cells could themselves form colonies in culture. To do so, it was first necessary to identify culture conditions that would induce their growth while preserving their long- term reconstituting capacity. Marrow was cultured with various cytokines in liquid suspension for 4 days, after which the surviving LTR activity was quantitated in a competitive in vivo assay. Activity was preserved near input levels with combined murine c-kit ligand (KL), interleukin-1 (IL-1), IL-6, and IL-11. When the cultures also included tritiated or unlabeled thymidine, LTR potential was eliminated, indicating that essentially all LTR cells were induced into cell cycle with these cytokines. To purify them, marrow was sorted on the basis of Ly6A expression and Rhodamine 123 retention. The Ly6AhiRh123ls fraction contained 85% of total recovered LTR activity but only 1% of the recovered cells measured by multilineage colony formation in spleens or in vitro. This fraction was cultured in methyl cellulose with KL, IL-1, IL-6, and IL-11 for 4 to 6 days, after which colonies were isolated and injected into mice. High levels of permanent reconstitution were achievable in sublethally irradiated W41/W41 mice after the injection of a single reconstituting unit, and limiting dilution analysis estimated the frequency of multilineage LTR at 1 in 11,200 unpurified adult marrow cells. In either lethally irradiated normal or sublethally irradiated W41/W41 mice, 1-year lymphomyeloid reconstitutions were obtained from 1 in 65 to 84 colonies of 2 to 16 dispersed cells, but not from larger colonies or those with clumped cells. The results establish that resting marrow LTR cells can be separated from almost all of the more advanced clonogenic cells that are still pluripotential, can be induced to cycle in culture by defined cytokines with preservation of their reconstituting potential, and can be manipulated and assayed efficiently at single-cell and colony levels.  相似文献   

7.
We investigated hematopoietic capabilities of murine skeletal muscle using methylcellulose culture and transplantation into lethally irradiated mice. Muscle mononuclear cells (MNC) contained colony-forming cells and long-term engrafting cells. Studies using chimeric mice indicated a bone marrow origin of the hematopoietic cells in the muscle. We then separated muscle MNC by FACS sorting into Ly-5-positive cells and Ly-5-negative cells and analyzed their hematopoietic capability in vitro and in vivo. The hematopoietic progenitors and stem cells were present only in the Ly-5-positive fraction.  相似文献   

8.
Qian H  Tryggvason K  Jacobsen SE  Ekblom M 《Blood》2006,107(9):3503-3510
The laminin receptor integrin alpha6 chain is ubiquitously expressed in human and mouse hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. We have studied its role for homing of stem and progenitor cells to mouse hematopoietic tissues in vivo. A function-blocking anti-integrin alpha6 antibody significantly reduced progenitor cell homing to bone marrow (BM) of lethally irradiated mice, with a corresponding retention of progenitors in blood. Remarkably, the anti-integrin alpha6 antibody profoundly inhibited BM homing of long-term multilineage engrafting stem cells, studied by competitive repopulation assay and analysis of donor-derived lymphocytes and myeloid cells in blood 16 weeks after transplantation. A similar profound inhibition of long-term stem cell homing was obtained by using a function-blocking antibody against alpha4 integrin, studied in parallel. Furthermore, the anti-integrin alpha6 and alpha4 antibodies synergistically inhibited homing of short-term repopulating stem cells. Intravenous injection of anti-integrin alpha6 antibodies, in contrast to antibodies against alpha4 integrin, did not mobilize progenitors or enhance cytokine-induced mobilization by G-CSF. Our results provide the first evidence for a distinct functional role of integrin alpha6 receptor during hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell homing and collaboration of alpha6 integrin with alpha4 integrin receptors during homing of short-term stem cells.  相似文献   

9.
OBJECTIVE: Hematopoietic progenitors generated by ex vivo expansion "home" less efficiently to the bone marrow (BM) after intravenous transplantation than fresh cells. To explore the underlying cause of this transplantation defect, we examined the homing and engraftment properties in vivo of fresh and cultured marrow cells differing in beta1 integrin expression. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fresh murine BM cells, or the expanded progeny of enriched Sca-1(+) c-kit(+)Lin(-) stem cells, were fractionated into beta1(-/lo) and beta1(+) subpopulations by cell sorting. These populations were assayed for their content of in vitro colony-forming cells (CFCs), cells able to provide radioprotection, and early and long-term multilineage hematopoietic reconstitution following transplantation into myeloablated recipients. These endpoints were correlated with the homing properties of beta1(-/lo) and beta1(+) cells that were labeled with 5- (and 6-) carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester (CFSE) and tracked to hematopoietic organs 24 hours after injection into lethally irradiated mice. RESULTS: Most normal stem and progenitor cells express high levels of beta1 integrin. In contrast, most clonogenic cells generated in vitro are beta1(-/lo). Consequently, expanded beta1(-/lo) progenitors failed to provide radioprotection or repopulate the hematopoietic system following intravenous transplantation. Defective engraftment of expanded cells was associated with reduced homing of beta1(-/lo) cells to the bone marrow. CONCLUSION: Downregulation of beta1 integrin on primitive hematopoietic cells during ex vivo expansion reduces their homing efficiency and negatively impacts hematopoietic reconstitution in vivo. Strategies directed at preserving beta1 integrin expression during culture may improve the clinical utility of expanded hematopoietic cells.  相似文献   

10.
Cashman JD  Clark-Lewis I  Eaves AC  Eaves CJ 《Blood》1999,94(11):3722-3729
Nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice transplanted with human cord blood or adult marrow cells and injected 6 weeks posttransplant with 2 daily doses of transforming growth factor-beta(1) (TGF-beta(1)), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), or a nonaggregating form of macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha) showed unique patterns of inhibition of human progenitor proliferation 1 day later. TGF-beta(1) was active on long-term culture initiating cells (LTC-IC) and on primitive erythroid and granulopoietic colony-forming cells (HPP-CFC), but had no effect on mature CFC. MCP-1 inhibited the cycling of both types of HPP-CFC but not LTC-IC. MIP-1alpha did not inhibit either LTC-IC or granulopoietic HPP-CFC but was active on erythroid HPP-CFC and mature granulopoietic CFC. All of these responses were independent of the source of human cells transplanted. LTC-IC of either human cord blood or adult marrow origin continue to proliferate in NOD/SCID mice for many weeks, although the turnover of all types of human CFC in mice transplanted with adult human marrow (but not cord blood) is downregulated after 6 weeks. Interestingly, administration of either MIP-1beta, an antagonist of both MIP-1alpha and MCP-1 or MCP-1(9-76), an antagonist of MCP-1 (and MCP-2 and MCP-3), into mice in which human marrow-derived CFC had become quiescent, caused the rapid reactivation of these progenitors in vivo. These results provide the first definition of stage-specific inhibitors of human hematopoietic progenitor cell cycling in vivo. In addition they show that endogenous chemokines can contribute to late graft failure, which can be reversed by the administration of specific antagonists.  相似文献   

11.
The transmembrane glycoprotein CD34 is expressed on human hematopoietic stem cells and committed progenitors in the bone marrow, and CD34-positive selection currently is used to isolate bone marrow repopulating cells in clinical transplantation protocols. Recently, CD34- hematopoietic stem cells were described in both humans and mice, and it was suggested that CD34+ murine bone marrow cells may lack long-term reconstituting ability. In this study, the long-term repopulating ability of CD34+Lin- vs CD34-Lin- cells was compared directly using syngeneic murine bone marrow transplantation. Highly purified populations of CD34+Lin- and CD34-Lin- cells each are able to reconstitute bone marrow, confirming that both populations contain hematopoietic stem cells; however, the number of hematopoietic stem cells in the CD34+Lin- fraction is approximately 100-fold greater than the number in the CD34-Lin- fraction. In competitive repopulation experiments, CD34+ stem cells are better able to engraft the bone marrow than are CD34- cells. CD34+Lin- cells provide both short- and long-term engraftment, but the CD34-Lin- cells are capable of only long-term engraftment. Ex vivo, the CD34+Lin- stem cells expand over 3 days in culture and maintain the ability to durably engraft animals in a serial transplant model. In contrast, when CD34-Lin- cells are cultured using the same conditions ex vivo, the cell number decreases, and the cells do not retain the ability to repopulate the bone marrow. Thus, the CD34+Lin- and CD34-Lin- cells constitute two functionally distinct populations that are capable of long-term bone marrow reconstitution.  相似文献   

12.
Cashman  JD; Eaves  AC; Eaves  CJ 《Blood》1994,84(5):1534-1542
In the present study, we investigated the ability of the tetrapeptide NAc-Ser-Asp-Lys-Pro-OH (AcSDKP), a reported inhibitor of primitive hematopoietic cells, to influence the proliferative behavior of primitive normal and chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) progenitor cells in the adherent layer of long-term cultures (LTCs). Addition of > or = 50 ng/mL of AcSDKP to LTCs of normal cells at the time of the regular weekly half-medium change selectively and reversibly decreased the proportion of high proliferative potential erythroid and granulopoietic progenitors in the adherent layer that were in S-phase without changing their numbers, but had no effect on either the cycling activity or number of analogous (neoplastic) cells in the adherent layer of CML LTCs. Specificity of the effect of AcSDKP on primitive normal progenitors was demonstrated by the finding that a similar addition of either the control peptide, AcSDKE, or 100 ng/mL of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha, which contains the SDKP sequence), or SDKP itself (at 300 ng/mL) did not inhibit the proliferation of primitive normal progenitors in LTC adherent layers. Incorporation of > or = 30 ng/mL of AcSDKP (but not the related control peptide, AcSDKE) directly into methylcellulose cultures of normal marrow cells resulted in a dose- dependent suppression of colony formation, which was not seen in similar studies with CML marrow or after removal of adherent cells from normal marrow. Additional experiments showed that the inhibitory effect of AcSDKP on primitive normal progenitor cycling in the LTC system could be overcome by the simultaneous addition of macrophage inflammatory protein-1 beta (MIP-1 beta); an antagonist of MIP-1 alpha. The apparent differential effect of AcSDKP on primitive normal and CML progenitors may thus be a secondary consequence of the differential responsiveness of these cells to MIP-1 alpha for another molecule antagonized by MIP-1 beta), whose production or release by adherent marrow cells is inducible by AcSDKP. Such a mechanism may offer a method for obtaining localized increases in vivo of cytokines like MIP- 1 alpha, suggesting novel and perhaps less toxic strategies for protecting primitive normal progenitors during repeated treatments with cycle-active chemotherapeutic agents where escalating the dose of drug given would be desirable.  相似文献   

13.
Chemotherapy-induced neutropenia is a major dose-limiting factor in the management of cancer patients. Most chemotherapeutic agents are active against proliferating cells, interfering with DNA replication and/or mitosis. A number of chemokines, notably macrophage inflammatory protein-1 alpha [MIP-1alpha], have been reported to induce cell-cycle arrest in immature hematopoietic progenitors, raising the possibility that chemokines, such as MIP-1alpha, could be used to reduce or even eliminate the hematologic toxicity of cycle-active chemotherapy. We tested the effectiveness of BB-10010 [a genetically engineered analog of human MIP-1alpha] in vivo against three different cytotoxic drugs [cyclophosphamide (Cy), 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C)] commonly used in cancer therapy. BB-10010 treatment reduced the toxicity of all three agents, though the precise mode of protection varied with the cytotoxic drug used. BB-10010 reduced the neutropenic interval in Cy-treated mice without affecting the neutropenic nadir, whereas the absolute neutrophil counts [ANC] of both 5-FU and Ara-C treated mice were significantly higher throughout the neutropenic interval for mice receiving BB-10010 prior to chemotherapy. These findings indicate that the ability to manipulate the cell cycle of hematopoietic progenitors with chemokines, such as BB-10010/MIP-1alpha and other negative regulators, may be exploited to reduce chemotherapy-induced neutropenia; furthermore, the fact that BB-10010 is effective against several different cytotoxic agents is cause for guarded optimism that this approach may be generally applicable, and, once optimized for patient use, may prove to be of significant clinical benefit.  相似文献   

14.
Soma  T; Yu  JM; Dunbar  CE 《Blood》1996,87(11):4561-4567
Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and macrophage inflammatory protein-l alpha (MIP-1 alpha) are both well-described inhibitors of committed and multipotential hematopoietic progenitors. The effect of these cytokines; on true stem cell activity in ex vivo culture systems as assayed by murine long-term repopulating activity (LTRA) has not been examined. We studied the stem cell effects of the addition of these cytokines to ex vivo cultures containing interleukin-3 (IL-3), IL- 6, and stem cell factor (SCF), using the murine competitive repopulation assay. We also tested the impact of adding an anti-TGF- beta neutralizing antibody, to ask whether abrogation of autocrine/paracrine TGF-beta may protect or enhance the survival of LTRA during ex vivo culture. TGF-beta 1 had significant suppressive effects on both short- and long-term repopulating activities, and anti- TGF-beta antibody had enhancing effects compared with control cultures containing IL-3, IL-6, and SCF alone. MIP-1 alpha had no significant effects on either short- or long-term repopulating ability. These data suggest that abrogation of TGF-beta during suspension culture may allow enhanced survival or even expansion of primitive cells ex vivo, with implications for many applications, including gene therapy.  相似文献   

15.
The cytokines interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) have been implicated in protecting normal hematopoiesis from both irradiation and chemotherapy damage. The mechanism of action of these cytokines and which cells are protected is not known. In this study, we report on the ability of IL-1 and TNF-alpha to protect hematopoietic cells capable of repopulating irradiated long-term bone marrow stromal cultures from 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide (4-HC). Irradiated long-term bone marrow cultures recharged with hematopoietic cells pretreated with IL-1 and TNF-alpha prior to 4-HC were shown to give rise to greater numbers of colony-forming cells at 4-5 weeks of culture within both the nonadherent and adherent cell populations of the long-term cultures when compared to controls. These results suggest that IL-1 and TNF-alpha can protect human long-term culture-initiating cells, which are closely related to reconstituting stem cells.  相似文献   

16.
Keller  JR; Ortiz  M; Ruscetti  FW 《Blood》1995,86(5):1757-1764
It is known that the majority of primitive hematopoietic progenitors are in a noncycling quiescent state. In addition, normal hematopoietic progenitors and progenitor cell lines show an absolute dependence on growth factors for their survival in vitro, yet the effect of growth factors on progenitor cell survival has not been separated from effects on both proliferation and differentiation. Using an in vitro assay system, we examined whether growth factors could promote the survival of stem cells in culture in the absence of cell division. These studies show that steel factor (SLF) and, to a lesser extent, interleukin-3 (IL- 3) directly promoted the survival of elutriated bone marrow progenitor cells (countercurrent centrifugal elutriation [CCE]-27) that are enriched for primitive hematopoietic progenitors that respond to the combination of SLF plus IL-3. Furthermore, SLF promoted the survival of short-term reconstituting cells (STRC), and long-term reconstituting cells (LTRC) with trilineage reconstitution potential in vivo. In comparison, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), IL-6, leukemia inhibitory factor, IL-11, IL-1, granulocyte macrophage CSF (GM- CSF), and macrophage CSF (M-CSF) had no effect on the survival of these cells. In the presence of mitotic inhibitors (nocodazole or aphidicolin), SLF promoted the survival of CCE-27 progenitor cells that respond to the combination of SLF plus IL-3 in vitro and STRCs and LTRCs that are detected in vivo. Taken together, these data show that SLF can directly promote the survival of hematopoietic progenitor cells in the absence of cell division.  相似文献   

17.
Purton LE  Bernstein ID  Collins SJ 《Blood》2000,95(2):470-477
The retinoic acid receptor (RAR) agonist, all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA), is a potent inducer of terminal differentiation of malignant promyelocytes, but its effects on more primitive hematopoietic progenitors and stem cells are less clear. We previously reported that pharmacologic levels (1 micromol) of ATRA enhanced the generation of colony-forming cell (CFC) and colony-forming unit-spleen (CFU-S) in liquid suspension cultures of lin- c-kit+ Sca-1+ murine hematopoietic precursors. In this study, we further investigated the effects of ATRA as well as an RAR antagonist, AGN 193109, on the generation of transplantable cells, including pre-CFU-S, short-term repopulating stem cells (STRCs), and long-term repopulating stem cells (LTRCs). ATRA enhanced the ex vivo maintenance and production of competitive repopulating STRCs and LTRCs from lin- c-kit+ Sca-1+ cells cultured in liquid suspension for 14 days. In addition, ATRA prevented the differentiation of these primitive stem cells into more mature pre-CFU-S during the 14 days of culture. In marked contrast, lin- c-kit+ Sca-1+ cells cultured with AGN 193109 for 7 days had virtually no short- or long-term repopulating ability, but displayed an approximately 6-fold increase in the pre-CFU-S population. The data suggest that the RAR agonist ATRA enhances the maintenance and self-renewal of short- and long-term repopulating stem cells. In contrast, the RAR antagonist AGN 193109 abrogates reconstituting ability, most likely by promoting the differentiation of the primitive stem cells. These results imply an important and unexpected role of retinoids in regulating hematopoietic stem cell differentiation. (Blood. 2000;95:470-477)  相似文献   

18.
In vivo stem cell function of interleukin-3-induced blast cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The treatment of mice with high doses of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) results in an enrichment of primitive hematopoietic progenitors. Using this procedure, we obtained a new class of murine hematopoietic colonies that had very high secondary plating efficiencies in vitro and could differentiate into not only myeloid cells but also into lymphoid lineage cells. The phenotypes of interleukin-3 (IL-3) induced blast colony cells were Thy-1-positive and lineage-marker-negative. We examined whether these blast colony cells contained primitive hematopoietic stem cells in vivo and could reconstitute hematopoietic tissues in lethally irradiated mice. Blast colony cells could generate macroscopic visible spleen colonies on days 8 and 12, and 5 x 10(3) blast cells were sufficient to protect them from lethally irradiation. It was shown that 6 or 8 weeks after transplantation of 5 x 10(3) blast cells, donor male cells were detected in the spleen and thymus of the female recipients but not in the bone marrow by Southern blot analysis using Y-encoded DNA probe. After 10 weeks, bone marrow cells were partially repopulated from donor cells. In a congenic mouse system, donor-derived cells (Ly5.2) were detected in the thymus and spleen 6 weeks after transplantation. Fluorescence-activated cell sorter analyses showed that B cells and macrophages developed from donor cells in the spleen. In the thymus, donor-derived cells were found in CD4, CD8 double-positive, single-positive, and double-negative populations. Reconstitution of bone marrow was delayed and myeloid and lymphoid cells were detected 10 weeks after transplantation. These results indicate that IL-3-induced blast cells contain the primitive hematopoietic stem cells capable of reconstituting hematopoietic organs in lethally irradiated mice.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The in vitro study of stem-cell-stromal-cell interactions has previously been made possible by the existence of a technique for long-term murine marrow culture, but the occurrence of both stem cells and stromal cells in fresh bone marrow (BM) explants and the heterogeneity of stromal cells have delayed functional categorization. Therefore, single-cell suspensions of murine BM were passed over nylon wool columns to allow fractionation of cells having distinctive function for in vitro hemopoiesis. A subpopulation of nylon-column-nonadherent (NNA) cells (20% +/- 1% total cells) is devoid of stromal progenitors that form the in vitro microenvironment, but the NNA subpopulation has control numbers of hemopoietic colony-forming cells, GM-CFU-C, and high-proliferative-potential colony forming cells (HPP-CFC). This subpopulation also produces control numbers of in vivo spleen colony-forming cells, CFU-S, and has control numbers of primitive, noncycling colony-forming cells that resist in vitro treatment with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). By contrast, nylon-adherent populations, when eluted by mechanical agitation (MA) (41% +/- 1%) or by subsequent EDTA treatment (CA) (6% +/- 1%) could reform the hemopoietic microenvironment in vitro. Stromal progenitor cells were negative for surface markers Thy-1 and Mac-1. When NNA stem cells were added to culture with nylon-adherent stromal fractions, lodgement of stem cells occurred, resulting in stem cell proliferation for up to three months.  相似文献   

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