Baksh D et al. (AUG 2003)
Experimental hematology 31 8 723--32
Adult human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal progenitor cells are capable of adhesion-independent survival and expansion.
OVERVIEW: We show the existence of adult human mesenchymal progenitor cells (hMPCs) that can proliferate,in a cytokine-dependent manner,as individual cells in stirred suspension cultures (SSC) while maintaining their ability to form functional differentiated mesenchymal cell types. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Ficolled human bone marrow (BM)-derived cells were grown in SSC (and adherent controls) in the presence and absence of exogenously added cytokines. Phenotypic,gene expression,and functional assays for hematopoietic and nonhematopoietic cell populations were used to kinetically track cell production. Limiting-dilution analysis was used to relate culture-produced cells to input cell populations. RESULTS: Cytokine cocktail influenced total and progenitor cell expansion,as well as the types of cells generated upon plating. Flow cytometric analysis of CD117,CD123,and CD45 expression showed that cytokine supplementation influenced SSC output. The concomitant growth of CD45(+) and CD45(-) cells in the cultures that exhibited the greatest hMPC expansions suggests that the growth of these cells may benefit from interactions with hematopoietic cells. Functional assays demonstrated that the SSC-derived cells (input CFU-O number: 1990+/-377) grown in the presence of SCF+IL-3 resulted,after 21 days,in the generation of a significantly greater number (ptextless0.05) of bone progenitors (33,700+/-8763 CFU-O) than similarly initiated adherent cultures (214+/-75 CFU-O). RT-PCR analysis confirmed that the SSC-derived cells grown in osteogenic conditions express bone-specific genes (Cbfa1/Runx2,bone sialoprotein,and osteocalcin). CONCLUSIONS: Our approach not only provides an alternative strategy to expand adult BM-derived nonhematopoietic progenitor cell numbers in a scalable and controllable bioprocess,but also questions established biological paradigms concerning the properties of connective-tissue stem and progenitor cells.
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Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1a1 is dispensable for stem cell function in the mouse hematopoietic and nervous systems.
High levels of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity have been proposed to be a common feature of stem cells. Adult hematopoietic,neural,and cancer stem cells have all been reported to have high ALDH activity,detected using Aldefluor,a fluorogenic substrate for ALDH. This activity has been attributed to Aldh1a1,an enzyme that is expressed at high levels in stem cells and that has been suggested to regulate stem cell function. Nonetheless,Aldh1a1 function in stem cells has never been tested genetically. We observed that Aldh1a1 was preferentially expressed in mouse hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and expression increased with age. Hematopoietic cells from Aldh1a1-deficient mice exhibited increased sensitivity to cyclophosphamide in a non-cell-autonomous manner,consistent with its role in cyclophosphamide metabolism in the liver. However,Aldh1a1 deficiency did not affect hematopoiesis,HSC function,or the capacity to reconstitute irradiated recipients in young or old adult mice. Aldh1a1 deficiency also did not affect Aldefluor staining of hematopoietic cells. Finally,Aldh1a1 deficiency did not affect the function of stem cells from the adult central or peripheral nervous systems. Aldh1a1 is not a critical regulator of adult stem cell function or Aldefluor staining in mice.
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Povsic TJ et al. (OCT 2009)
Journal of thrombosis and thrombolysis 28 3 259--65
BACKGROUND: Interest in the biology of endogenous progenitor cells (EPCs) continues to grow as evidence of their role in vascular repair mounts. EPC enumeration requires specialized laboratory techniques and is performed immediately after sample acquisition,limiting the clinical contexts in which EPC enumeration can be performed and the ability to increase sample sizes through multi-center participation. METHODS: We compared the numbers of EPCs enumerated in samples processed immediately after acquisition (n = 36) with EPCs enumerated in specimens stored for 24 hours or after cryopreservation of mononuclear cells (MNC) using two EPC identification strategies: cell surface marker expression (CD133/CD34) and aldehyde dehydrogenase activity (ALDH(br) cells). RESULTS: EPCs assessed in fresh samples correlated with EPCs enumerated after whole blood storage (r = 0.699 for CD133(+)CD34(+) cells,r = 0.880 for ALDH(br) cells,P textless 0.005 and P textless 0.0001,respectively) or mononuclear cryopreservation (r = 0.590 for CD133(+)CD34(+) cells,r = 0.894 for ALDH(br) cells,P textless 0.0001 for each); however,correlation based on assessment of ALDH(br) cells was higher (P textless 0.0003 for comparison of correlation coefficients). Initial results from a multi-site clinical trial suggest that EPC enumeration after mononuclear cell cryopreservation is feasible. CONCLUSION: EPC analysis based on ALDH activity is reproducible,even after extended whole blood storage or MNC cryopreservation.
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Lioznov MV et al. (MAY 2005)
Bone marrow transplantation 35 9 909--14
Aldehyde dehydrogenase activity as a marker for the quality of hematopoietic stem cell transplants.
Taking advantage of fluorescent substrates for their metabolic marker aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH),hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) were defined as SSC(lo)ALDH(br) - reflecting their low orthogonal light scattering and bright fluorescence intensity in flow cytometry. Based thereon,we investigated the usefulness of ALDH activity for characterizing HSC graft quality,particularly under stress conditions. We first compared the expression of ALDH vs CD34 in bone marrow and peripheral blood stem cell (PBSC) samples over 7 days. We noted that (i) only ALDH activity but not CD34 expression strongly reflected colony-forming ability over time,and that (ii) PBSC grafts stored at room temperature lost most of their progenitor cells within just 48 h. We then retrospectively related ALDH and CD34 expression as well as granulocyte-macrophage colony-forming units (CFU-GM) potential for 19 cryopreserved allogeneic PBSC grafts to engraftment data. Strikingly,in all six patients who received markedly decreased numbers of SSC(lo)ALDH(br) cells,this was associated not only with almost complete loss of CFU-GM potential but also with delayed establishment/permanent absence of full hematopoietic donor cell chimerism,whereas all other patients showed early complete donor chimerism. In conclusion,we suggest to measure ALDH activity as a surrogate marker for HSC activity,and to transport and store PBSC under controlled cooling conditions.
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Vauchez K et al. (NOV 2009)
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy 17 11 1948--58
Aldehyde dehydrogenase activity identifies a population of human skeletal muscle cells with high myogenic capacities.
Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1A1 (ALDH) activity is one hallmark of human bone marrow (BM),umbilical cord blood (UCB),and peripheral blood (PB) primitive progenitors presenting high reconstitution capacities in vivo. In this study,we have identified ALDH(+) cells within human skeletal muscles,and have analyzed their phenotypical and functional characteristics. Immunohistofluorescence analysis of human muscle tissue sections revealed rare endomysial cells. Flow cytometry analysis using the fluorescent substrate of ALDH,Aldefluor,identified brightly stained (ALDH(br)) cells with low side scatter (SSC(lo)),in enzymatically dissociated muscle biopsies,thereafter abbreviated as SMALD(+) (for skeletal muscle ALDH(+)) cells. Phenotypical analysis discriminated two sub-populations according to CD34 expression: SMALD(+)/CD34(-) and SMALD(+)/CD34(+) cells. These sub-populations did not initially express endothelial (CD31),hematopoietic (CD45),and myogenic (CD56) markers. Upon sorting,however,whereas SMALD(+)/CD34(+) cells developed in vitro as a heterogeneous population of CD56(-) cells able to differentiate in adipoblasts,the SMALD(+)/CD34(-) fraction developed in vitro as a highly enriched population of CD56(+) myoblasts able to form myotubes. Moreover,only the SMALD(+)/CD34(-) population maintained a strong myogenic potential in vivo upon intramuscular transplantation. Our results suggest that ALDH activity is a novel marker for a population of new human skeletal muscle progenitors presenting a potential for cell biology and cell therapy.
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Jean E et al. (JAN 2011)
Journal of cellular and molecular medicine 15 1 119--33
Aldehyde dehydrogenase activity promotes survival of human muscle precursor cells.
Aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDH) are a family of enzymes that efficiently detoxify aldehydic products generated by reactive oxygen species and might therefore participate in cell survival. Because ALDH activity has been used to identify normal and malignant cells with stem cell properties,we asked whether human myogenic precursor cells (myoblasts) could be identified and isolated based on their levels of ALDH activity. Human muscle explant-derived cells were incubated with ALDEFLUOR,a fluorescent substrate for ALDH,and we determined by flow cytometry the level of enzyme activity. We found that ALDH activity positively correlated with the myoblast-CD56(+) fraction in those cells,but,we also observed heterogeneity of ALDH activity levels within CD56-purified myoblasts. Using lentiviral mediated expression of shRNA we demonstrated that ALDH activity was associated with expression of Aldh1a1 protein. Surprisingly,ALDH activity and Aldh1a1 expression levels were very low in mouse,rat,rabbit and non-human primate myoblasts. Using different approaches,from pharmacological inhibition of ALDH activity by diethylaminobenzaldehyde,an inhibitor of class I ALDH,to cell fractionation by flow cytometry using the ALDEFLUOR assay,we characterized human myoblasts expressing low or high levels of ALDH. We correlated high ALDH activity ex vivo to resistance to hydrogen peroxide (H(2) O(2) )-induced cytotoxic effect and in vivo to improved cell viability when human myoblasts were transplanted into host muscle of immune deficient scid mice. Therefore detection of ALDH activity,as a purification strategy,could allow non-toxic and efficient isolation of a fraction of human myoblasts resistant to cytotoxic damage.
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Marcato P et al. (MAY 2011)
Cell cycle (Georgetown,Tex.) 10 9 1378--84
Aldehyde dehydrogenase: its role as a cancer stem cell marker comes down to the specific isoform.
Recent evidence suggests that enhanced aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity is a hallmark of cancer stem cells (CSC) measurable by the aldefluor assay. ALDH1A1,one of 19 ALDH isoforms expressed in humans,was generally believed to be responsible for the ALDH activity of CSCs. More recently,experiments with murine hematopoietic stem cells,murine progenitor pancreatic cells,and human breast CSCs indicate that other ALDH isoforms,particularly ALDH1A3,significantly contribute to aldefluor positivity,which may be tissue and cancer specific. Therefore,potential prognostic application involving the use of CSC prevalence in tumor tissue to predict patient outcome requires the identification and quantification of specific ALDH isoforms. Herein we review the suggested roles of ALDH in CSC biology and the immunohistological studies testing the potential application of ALDH isoforms as novel cancer prognostic indicators.
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