Migliaccio AR et al. (FEB 2003)
The Journal of experimental medicine 197 3 281--96
GATA-1 as a regulator of mast cell differentiation revealed by the phenotype of the GATA-1low mouse mutant.
Here it is shown that the phenotype of adult mice lacking the first enhancer (DNA hypersensitive site I) and the distal promoter of the GATA-1 gene (neo Delta HS or GATA-1(low) mutants) reveals defects in mast cell development. These include the presence of morphologically abnormal alcian blue(+) mast cells and apoptotic metachromatic(-) mast cell precursors in connective tissues and peritoneal lavage and numerous (60-70% of all the progenitors) unique" trilineage cells committed to erythroid�
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Kootstra NA et al. (FEB 2003)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100 3 1298--303
Abrogation of postentry restriction of HIV-1-based lentiviral vector transduction in simian cells.
HIV-1 replication in simian cells is restricted at an early postentry step because of the presence of an inhibitory cellular factor. This block reduces the usefulness of HIV-1-based lentiviral vectors in primate animal models. Here,we demonstrate that substitution of the cyclophilin A (CyPA) binding region in the capsid of an HIV-1-based lentiviral vector (LV) with that of the macrophage tropic HIV-1 Ba-L resulted in a vector that was resistant to the inhibitory effect and efficiently transduced simian cells. Notably,the chimeric gag LV efficiently transduced primary simian hematopoietic progenitor cells,a critical cellular target in gene therapy. The alterations in the CyPA binding region did not affect CyPA incorporation; however,transduction by the gag chimeric LV seemed to be relatively insensitive to cyclosporin A,indicating that it does not require CyPA for early postentry steps. In dual infection experiments,the gag chimeric LV failed to remove the block to transduction of the WT LV,suggesting that the gag chimeric LV did not saturate the inhibitory simian cellular factor. These data suggest that the CyPA binding region of capsid contains a viral determinant involved in the postentry restriction of HIV-1-based lentiviral vectors. Overall,the findings demonstrate that the host range of HIV-1-based LV can be altered by modifications in the packaging construct.
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Pineault N et al. (JUN 2003)
Blood 101 11 4529--38
Induction of acute myeloid leukemia in mice by the human leukemia-specific fusion gene NUP98-HOXD13 in concert with Meis1.
HOX genes,notably members of the HOXA cluster,and HOX cofactors have increasingly been linked to human leukemia. Intriguingly,HOXD13,a member of the HOXD cluster not normally expressed in hematopoietic cells,was recently identified as a partner of NUP98 in a t(2;11) translocation associated with t-AML/MDS. We have now tested directly the leukemogenic potential of the NUP98-HOXD13 t(2; 11) fusion gene in the murine hematopoietic model. NUP98-HOXD13 strongly promoted growth and impaired differentiation of early hematopoietic progenitor cells in vitro; this effect was dependent on the NUP98 portion and an intact HOXD13 homeodomain. Expression of the NUP98-HOXD13 fusion gene in vivo resulted in a partial impairment of lymphopoiesis but did not induce evident hematologic disease until late after transplantation (more than 5 months),when some mice developed a myeloproliferative-like disease. In contrast,mice transplanted with bone marrow (BM) cells cotransduced with NUP98-HOXD13 and the HOX cofactor Meis1 rapidly developed lethal and transplantable acute myeloid leukemia (AML),with a median disease onset of 75 days. In summary,this study demonstrates that NUP98-HOXD13 can be directly implicated in the molecular process leading to leukemic transformation,and it supports a model in which the transforming properties of NUP98-HOXD13 are mediated through HOX-dependent pathways.
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Johnson JJ et al. (APR 2003)
Blood 101 8 3229--35
Prenatal and postnatal myeloid cells demonstrate stepwise progression in the pathogenesis of MLL fusion gene leukemia.
The steps to leukemia following an in utero fusion of MLL (HRX,ALL-1) to a partner gene in humans are not known. Introduction of the Mll-AF9 fusion gene into embryonic stem cells results in leukemia in mice with cell-type specificity similar to humans. In this study we used myeloid colony assays,immunophenotyping,and transplantation to evaluate myelopoiesis in Mll-AF9 mice. Colony assays demonstrated that both prenatal and postnatal Mll-AF9 tissues have significantly increased numbers of CD11b(+)/CD117(+)/Gr-1(+/-) myeloid cells,often in compact clusters. The self-renewal capacity of prenatal myeloid progenitors was found to decrease following serial replating of colony-forming cells. In contrast,early postnatal myeloid progenitors increased following replating; however,the enhanced self-renewal of early postnatal myeloid progenitor cells was limited and did not result in long-term cell lines or leukemia in vivo. Unlimited replating,long-term CD11b/Gr-1(+) myeloid cell lines,and the ability to produce early leukemia in vivo in transplantation experiments,were found only in mice with overt leukemia. Prenatal Mll-AF9 tissues had reduced total (mature and progenitor) CD11b/Gr-1(+) cells compared with wild-type tissues. Colony replating,immunophenotyping,and cytochemistry suggest that any perturbation of cellular differentiation from the prenatal stage onward is partial and largely reversible. We describe a novel informative in vitro and in vivo model system that permits study of the stages in the pathogenesis of Mll fusion gene leukemia,beginning in prenatal myeloid cells,progressing to a second stage in the postnatal period and,finally,resulting in overt leukemia in adult animals.
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Liu E et al. (APR 2003)
Blood 101 8 3294--301
Discrimination of polycythemias and thrombocytoses by novel, simple, accurate clonality assays and comparison with PRV-1 expression and BFU-E response to erythropoietin.
Essential thrombocythemia (ET) and polycythemia vera (PV) are clonal myeloproliferative disorders that are often difficult to distinguish from other causes of elevated blood cell counts. Assays that could reliably detect clonal hematopoiesis would therefore be extremely valuable for diagnosis. We previously reported 3 X-chromosome transcription-based clonality assays (TCAs) involving the G6PD,IDS,and MPP1 genes,which together were informative in about 65% of female subjects. To increase our ability to detect clonality,we developed simple TCA for detecting the transcripts of 2 additional X-chromosome genes: Bruton tyrosine kinase (BTK) and 4-and-a-half LIM domain 1 (FHL1). The combination of TCA established the presence or absence of clonal hematopoiesis in about 90% of female subjects. We show that both genes are subject to X-chromosome inactivation and are polymorphic in all major US ethnic groups. The 5 TCAs were used to examine clonality in 46 female patients along with assays for erythropoietin-independent erythroid colonies (EECs) and granulocyte PRV-1 mRNA levels to discriminate polycythemias and thrombocytoses. Of these,all 19 patients with familial polycythemia or thrombocytosis had polyclonal hematopoiesis,whereas 22 of 26 patients with clinical evidence of myeloproliferative disorder and 1 patient with clinically obscure polycythemia were clonal. Interestingly,interferon alpha therapy in 2 patients with PV was associated with reversion of clonal to polyclonal hematopoiesis. EECs were observed in 14 of 14 patients with PV and 4 of 12 with ET,and increased granulocyte PRV-1 mRNA levels were found in 9 of 13 patients with PV and 2 of 12 with ET. Thus,these novel clonality assays are useful in the diagnosis and follow-up of polycythemic conditions and disorders with increased platelet levels.
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Perez SA et al. (MAY 2003)
Blood 101 9 3444--50
A novel myeloid-like NK cell progenitor in human umbilical cord blood.
Natural killer (NK) cell differentiation from pluripotent CD34(+) human hematopoietic stem cells or oligopotent lymphoid progenitors has already been reported. In the present study,long-term cultures of the CD56(-)/CD34(-) myeloid-like adherent cell fraction (ACF) from umbilical cord blood (UCB),characterized by the expression of CD14(+) as well as other myeloid markers,were set up with flt3 ligand (FL) and interleukin-15 (IL-15). The UCB/ACF gradually expressed the CD56 marker,which reached fairly high levels (approximately 90% of the cells were CD56(+)) by day 15. FL plus IL-15-driven ACF/CD56(+) cells progressively expressed a mature NK functional program lysing both NK- and lymphokine-activate killer (LAK)-sensitive tumor targets and producing high levels of interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma),granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor,tumor necrosis factor alpha,and IL-10 upon stimulation with IL-12 and IL-18. Similar results were obtained when highly purified CD14(+) cells from UCB were cultured with FL and IL-15. In contrast,UCB/CD34(+) cells cultured under the same conditions showed a delayed expression of CD56 and behaved functionally differently in that they exhibited NK but not LAK cytotoxicity and produced significantly fewer cytokines. Kinetic studies on the phenotype of UCB/ACF or UCB/CD14(+) cells cultured in the presence of FL and IL-15 showed a rapid decrease in CD14 expression after day 5,which reached levels of zero by day 20. Approximately 60% of the CD56(+) derived from the UCB/ACF or the UCB/CD14(+) cells coexpressed CD14 by day 5. Taken together,our data support the role of CD14(+) myeloid-like cells within UCB as a novel progenitor for lymphoid NK cells.
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Chagraoui J et al. (APR 2003)
Blood 101 8 2973--82
Fetal liver stroma consists of cells in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition.
Liver becomes the predominant site of hematopoiesis by 11.5 dpc (days after coitus) in the mouse and 15 gestational weeks in humans and stays so until the end of gestation. The reason the liver is the major hematopoietic site during fetal life is not clear. In this work,we tried to define which of the fetal liver microenvironmental cell populations would be associated with the development of hematopoiesis and found that a population of cells with mixed endodermal and mesodermal features corresponded to hematopoietic-supportive fetal liver stroma. Stromal cells generated from primary cultures or stromal lines from mouse or human fetal liver in the hematopoietic florid phase expressed both mesenchymal markers (vimentin,osteopontin,collagen I,alpha smooth muscle actin,thrombospondin-1,EDa fibronectin,calponin,Stro-1 antigens,myocyte-enhancer factor 2C) and epithelial (alpha-fetoprotein,cytokeratins 8 and 18,albumin,E-cadherin,hepatocyte nuclear factor 3 alpha) markers. Such a cell population fits with the description of cells in epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT),often observed during development,including that of the liver. The hematopoietic supportive capacity of EMT cells was lost after hepatocytic maturation,induced by oncostatin M in the cell line AFT024. EMT cells were observed in the fetal liver microenvironment during the hematopoietic phase but not in nonhematopoietic liver by the end of gestation and in the adult. EMT cells represent a novel stromal cell type that may be generated from hepatic endodermal or mesenchymal stem cells or even from circulating hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) seeding the liver rudiment.
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Bouscary D et al. (MAY 2003)
Blood 101 9 3436--43
Critical role for PI 3-kinase in the control of erythropoietin-induced erythroid progenitor proliferation.
The production of red blood cells is tightly regulated by erythropoietin (Epo). The phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) pathway was previously shown to be activated in response to Epo. We studied the role of this pathway in the control of Epo-induced survival and proliferation of primary human erythroid progenitors. We show that phosphoinositide 3 (PI 3)-kinase associates with 4 tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins in primary human erythroid progenitors,namely insulin receptor substrate-2 (IRS2),Src homology 2 domain-containing inositol 5'-phosphatase (SHIP),Grb2-associated binder-1 (Gab1),and the Epo receptor (EpoR). Using different in vitro systems,we demonstrate that 3 alternative pathways independently lead to Epo-induced activation of PI 3-kinase and phosphorylation of its downstream effectors,Akt,FKHRL1,and P70S6 kinase: through direct association of PI 3-kinase with the last tyrosine residue (Tyr479) of the Epo receptor (EpoR),through recruitment and phosphorylation of Gab proteins via either Tyr343 or Tyr401 of the EpoR,or through phosphorylation of IRS2 adaptor protein. The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway was also activated by Epo in erythroid progenitors,but we found that this process is independent of PI 3-kinase activation. In erythroid progenitors,the functional role of PI 3-kinase was both to prevent apoptosis and to stimulate cell proliferation in response to Epo stimulation. Finally,our results show that PI 3-kinase-mediated proliferation of erythroid progenitors in response to Epo occurs mainly through modulation of the E3 ligase SCF(SKP2),which,in turn,down-regulates p27(Kip1) cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor via proteasome degradation.
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Nakorn TN et al. (JAN 2003)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100 1 205--10
Characterization of mouse clonogenic megakaryocyte progenitors.
Although it has been shown that unfractionated bone marrow,hematopoietic stem cells,common myeloid progenitors,and bipotent megakaryocyteerythrocyte progenitors can give rise to megakaryocyte colonies in culture,monopotent megakaryocyte-committed progenitors (MKP) have never been prospectively isolated from the bone marrow of adult mice. Here,we use a monoclonal antibody to the megakaryocyte-associated surface protein,CD9,to purify MKPs from the c-kit(+)Sca-1(-)IL7Ralpha(-)Thy1.1(-)Lin(-) fraction of adult C57BLKa-Thy1.1 bone marrow. The CD9(+) fraction contained a subset of CD41(+)FcgammaR(lo)CD34(+)CD38(+) cells that represent approximately 0.01% of the total nucleated bone marrow cells. They give rise mainly to colony-forming unit-megakaryocytes and occasionally burst-forming unit-megakaryocytes,with a plating efficiency textgreater60% at the single-cell level. In vivo,MKPs do not have spleen colony-forming activity nor do they contribute to long-term multilineage hematopoiesis; they give rise only to platelets for approximately 3 weeks. Common myeloid progenitors and megakaryocyteerythrocyte progenitors can differentiate into MKPs after 72 h in stromal cultures,indicating that MKPs are downstream of these two progenitors. These isolatable MKPs will be very useful for further studies of megakaryopoiesis as well as the elucidation of their gene expression patterns.
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Tan BL et al. (MAR 2003)
The Journal of biological chemistry 278 13 11686--95
Functional and biochemical consequences of abrogating the activation of multiple diverse early signaling pathways in Kit. Role for Src kinase pathway in Kit-induced cooperation with erythropoietin receptor.
Kit receptor tyrosine kinase and erythropoietin receptor (Epo-R) cooperate in regulating blood cell development. Mice that lack the expression of Kit or Epo-R die in utero of severe anemia. Stimulation of Kit by its ligand,stem cell factor activates several distinct early signaling pathways,including phospholipase C gamma,phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase,Src kinase,Grb2,and Grb7. The role of these pathways in Kit-induced growth,proliferation,or cooperation with Epo-R is not known. We demonstrate that inactivation of any one of these early signaling pathways in Kit significantly impairs growth and proliferation. However,inactivation of the Src pathway demonstrated the most profound defect. Combined stimulation with Epo also resulted in impaired cooperation between Src-defective Kit mutant and Epo-R and,to a lesser extent,with Kit mutants defective in the activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase or Grb2. The impaired cooperation between the Src-defective Kit mutant and Epo-R was associated with reduced transphosphorylation of Epo-R and expression of c-Myc. Remarkably,restoration of only the Src pathway in a Kit receptor defective in the activation of all early signaling pathways demonstrated a 50% correction in proliferation in response to Kit stimulation and completely restored the cooperation with Epo-R. These data demonstrate an essential role for Src pathway in regulating growth,proliferation,and cooperation with Epo-R downstream from Kit.
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Portis T and Longnecker R (JAN 2003)
Journal of virology 77 1 105--14
Epstein-Barr virus LMP2A interferes with global transcription factor regulation when expressed during B-lymphocyte development.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is associated with the development of malignant lymphomas and lymphoproliferative disorders in immunocompromised individuals. The LMP2A protein of EBV is thought to play a central role in this process by allowing the virus to persist in latently infected B lymphocytes. We have demonstrated that LMP2A,when expressed in B cells of transgenic mice,allows normal B-cell developmental checkpoints to be bypassed. To identify cellular genes targeted by LMP2A that are involved in this process,we have utilized DNA microarrays to compare gene transcription in B cells from wild-type versus LMP2A transgenic mice. In B cells from LMP2A transgenic mice,we observed decreased expression of many genes associated with normal B-cell development as well as reduced levels of the transcription factors that regulate their expression. In particular,expression of the transcription factor E2A was down-regulated in bone marrow and splenic B cells. Furthermore,E2A activity was inhibited in these cells as determined by decreased DNA binding and reduced expression of its target genes,including the transcription factors early B-cell factor and Pax-5. Expression of two E2A inhibitors,Id2 and SCL,was up-regulated in splenic B cells expressing LMP2A,suggesting a possible mechanism for E2A inhibition. These results indicate that LMP2A deregulates transcription factor expression and activity in developing B cells,and this likely allows for a bypass of normal signaling events required for proper B-cell development. The ability of LMP2A to interfere with B-cell transcription factor regulation has important implications regarding its role in EBV latency.
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Alberta JA et al. (APR 2003)
Blood 101 7 2570--4
Role of the WT1 tumor suppressor in murine hematopoiesis.
The WT1 tumor-suppressor gene is expressed by many forms of acute myeloid leukemia. Inhibition of this expression can lead to the differentiation and reduced growth of leukemia cells and cell lines,suggesting that WT1 participates in regulating the proliferation of leukemic cells. However,the role of WT1 in normal hematopoiesis is not well understood. To investigate this question,we have used murine cells in which the WT1 gene has been inactivated by homologous recombination. We have found that cells lacking WT1 show deficits in hematopoietic stem cell function. Embryonic stem cells lacking WT1,although contributing efficiently to other organ systems,make only a minimal contribution to the hematopoietic system in chimeras,indicating that hematopoietic stem cells lacking WT1 compete poorly with healthy stem cells. In addition,fetal liver cells lacking WT1 have an approximately 75% reduction in erythroid blast-forming unit (BFU-E),erythroid colony-forming unit (CFU-E),and colony-forming unit-granulocyte macrophage-erythroid-megakaryocyte (CFU-GEMM). However,transplantation of fetal liver hematopoietic cells lacking WT1 will repopulate the hematopoietic system of an irradiated adult recipient in the absence of competition. We conclude that the absence of WT1 in hematopoietic cells leads to functional defects in growth potential that may be of consequence to leukemic cells that have alterations in the expression of WT1.
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