Zimmerman Z et al. (AUG 2005)
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation 11 8 576--86
Effector cells derived from host CD8 memory T cells mediate rapid resistance against minor histocompatibility antigen-mismatched allogeneic marrow grafts without participation of perforin, Fas ligand, and the simultaneous inhibition of 3 tumor necrosis Fa
Reduced-intensity conditioning regimens for transplant recipients have heightened awareness of immunologic resistance to allogeneic bone marrow transplants (BMT). Although T cell-mediated cytotoxicity has been assumed to play a role in the resistance against donor allogeneic hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell grafts,several studies have reported relatively unimpaired resistance by recipients who lack perforin,Fas ligand (FasL),and other cytotoxic mediators. This study compared the early kinetics of T cell-mediated resistance in B6 (H2b) cytotoxically normal versus deficient recipients after transplantation with major histocompatibility complex-matched,minor histocompatibility antigen (MiHA)-mismatched allogeneic marrow grafts. Wild-type B6 or cytotoxic double-deficient perforin-/-/ gld+/+ (B6-cdd) mice were sensitized against major histocompatibility complex-matched BALB.B or C3H.SW (H2b) MiHA and transplanted with a high dose (1 ?? 107) of T cell-depleted bone marrow. CD8 T memory cells were shown to be present in recipients before BMT,and anti-CD8 monoclonal antibody infusion abolished resistance,thus demonstrating that CD8 T cells are the host effector population. Donor-committed and high proliferative potential progenitor numbers were markedly diminished by 48 hours after transplantation in both wild-type B6 and B6-cdd anti-donor MiHA-sensitized recipients. These observations indicate that the resistance pathway used in the cytotoxic deficient mice was both potent and rapidly induced - consistent with a CD8 memory T-cell response. To examine the role of Tumor necrosis factor-like weak inducer of apoptosis (TWEAK)- and TL1A-mediated cytotoxicity in this strong resistance,newly generated monoclonal antibodies specific for these ligands were administered to B6-cdd recipients sensitized to donor antigens. Recipients of syngeneic B6-gfp bone marrow exhibited significant donor colony-forming unit numbers after BMT. In contrast,low or absent colony-forming unit levels were detected in allogeneic recipients,including those that lacked perforin and FasL and that received anti-TWEAK,anti-tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand,and anti-TL1A monoclonal antibodies. These findings extend previous observations by demonstrating the existence of a rapidly effected resistance pathway mediated by memory CD8 effector T cells independent of the 2 major pathways of cytotoxicity. Together with previous findings,these results support the notion that effector cells derived from memory CD8 T-cell populations can mediate strong resistance against donor allogeneic MiHA-disparate hematopoietic engraftment by using a mechanism that is independent of the contribution of perforin,FasL,and the known death ligand receptor pathways. ?? 2005 American Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation.
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Wang W et al. (MAY 2016)
Cell 165 5 1092--105
Effector T Cells Abrogate Stroma-Mediated Chemoresistance in Ovarian Cancer.
Effector T cells and fibroblasts are major components in the tumor microenvironment. The means through which these cellular interactions affect chemoresistance is unclear. Here,we show that fibroblasts diminish nuclear accumulation of platinum in ovarian cancer cells,resulting in resistance to platinum-based chemotherapy. We demonstrate that glutathione and cysteine released by fibroblasts contribute to this resistance. CD8(+) T cells abolish the resistance by altering glutathione and cystine metabolism in fibroblasts. CD8(+) T-cell-derived interferon (IFN)γ controls fibroblast glutathione and cysteine through upregulation of gamma-glutamyltransferases and transcriptional repression of system xc(-) cystine and glutamate antiporter via the JAK/STAT1 pathway. The presence of stromal fibroblasts and CD8(+) T cells is negatively and positively associated with ovarian cancer patient survival,respectively. Thus,our work uncovers a mode of action for effector T cells: they abrogate stromal-mediated chemoresistance. Capitalizing upon the interplay between chemotherapy and immunotherapy holds high potential for cancer treatment.
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S. Kaur et al. (Mar 2024)
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology 12 Suppl. ment_1
Effects of a humanized CD47 antibody and recombinant SIRPα proteins on triple negative breast carcinoma stem cells
Signal regulatory protein-α (SIRPα,SHPS-1,CD172a) expressed on myeloid cells transmits inhibitory signals when it engages its counter-receptor CD47 on an adjacent cell. Elevated CD47 expression on some cancer cells thereby serves as an innate immune checkpoint that limits phagocytic clearance of tumor cells by macrophages and antigen presentation to T cells. Antibodies and recombinant SIRPα constructs that block the CD47-SIRPα interaction on macrophages exhibit anti-tumor activities in mouse models and are in ongoing clinical trials for treating several human cancers. Based on prior evidence that engaging SIRPα can also alter CD47 signaling in some nonmalignant cells,we compared direct effects of recombinant SIRPα-Fc and a humanized CD47 antibody that inhibits CD47-SIRPα interaction (CC-90002) on CD47 signaling in cancer stem cells derived from the MDA-MB- 231 triple-negative breast carcinoma cell line. Treatment with SIRPα-Fc significantly increased the formation of mammospheres by breast cancer stem cells as compared to CC-90002 treatment or controls. Furthermore,SIRPα-Fc treatment upregulated mRNA and protein expression of ALDH1 and altered the expression of genes involved in epithelial/mesenchymal transition pathways that are associated with a poor prognosis and enhanced metastatic activity. This indicates that SIRPα-Fc has CD47-mediated agonist activities in breast cancer stem cells affecting proliferation and metastasis pathways that differ from those of CC-90002. This SIRPα-induced CD47 signaling in breast carcinoma cells may limit the efficacy of SIRPα decoy therapeutics intended to stimulate innate antitumor immune responses.
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Druker BJ et al. (MAY 1996)
Nature medicine 2 5 561--6
Effects of a selective inhibitor of the Abl tyrosine kinase on the growth of Bcr-Abl positive cells.
The bcr-abl oncogene,present in 95% of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML),has been implicated as the cause of this disease. A compound,designed to inhibit the Abl protein tyrosine kinase,was evaluated for its effects on cells containing the Bcr-Abl fusion protein. Cellular proliferation and tumor formation by Bcr-Abl-expressing cells were specifically inhibited by this compound. In colony-forming assays of peripheral blood or bone marrow from patients with CML,there was a 92-98% decrease in the number of bcr-abl colonies formed but no inhibition of normal colony formation. This compound may be useful in the treatment of bcr-abl-positive leukemias.
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Liang Y et al. (AUG 2005)
Blood 106 4 1479--87
Effects of aging on the homing and engraftment of murine hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells.
To test the hypothesis that aging has negative effects on stem-cell homing and engraftment,young or old C57BL/6 bone marrow (BM) cells were injected,using a limiting-dilution,competitive transplantation method,into old or young Ly5 congenic mice. Numbers of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and progenitor cells (HPCs) recovered from BM or spleen were measured and compared with the numbers initially transplanted. Although the frequency of marrow competitive repopulation units (CRUs) increased approximately 2-fold from 2 months to 2 years of age,the BM homing efficiency of old CRUs was approximately 3-fold lower than that of young CRUs. Surprisingly,the overall size of individual stem-cell clones generated in recipients receiving a single CRU was not affected by donor age. However,the increased ages of HSC donors and HSC transplant recipients caused marked skewing of the pattern of engraftment toward the myeloid lineage,indicating that HSC-intrinsic and HSC-extrinsic (microenvironmental) age-related changes favor myelopoiesis. This correlated with changes after transplantation in the rate of recovery of circulating leukocytes,erythrocytes,and platelets. Recovery of the latter was especially blunted in aged recipients. Collectively,these findings may have implications for clinical HSC transplantation in which older persons increasingly serve as donors for elderly patients.
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E. Wallén et al. (Jun 2025)
Disease Models & Mechanisms 18 6
Effects of alcohol on the transcriptome, methylome and metabolome of in vitro gastrulating human embryonic cells
Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) affects embryonic development,causing a variable fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) phenotype with neurodevelopmental disorders and birth defects. To explore the effects of PAE on gastrulation,we used an in vitro model with subchronic moderate (20 mM) and severe (70 mM) ethanol exposures during the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into germ layer cells. We analyzed genome-wide gene expression (mRNA sequencing),DNA methylation (EPIC Illumina microarrays) and metabolome (non-targeted LC-MS) of the endodermal,mesodermal and ectodermal cells. The largest number of ethanol-induced alterations were observed in endodermal cells,whereas the most prominent changes were in ectodermal cells. Methionine metabolism and genes of the main signaling pathways involved in gastrulation and body patterning were affected by ethanol in all germ layers. Many of the altered genes,including BMP4,FGF8,SIX3 and LHX2,have previously been associated with PAE and phenotypes of FASD,like defects in heart and corpus callosum development as well as holoprosencephaly. Our findings support the early origin of alcohol-induced developmental disorders and strengthen the role of methionine cycle in the etiology of FASD.
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Lee AS et al. (AUG 2009)
Cell Cycle 8 16 2608--2612
Effects of cell number on teratoma formation by human embryonic stem cells
Teratoma formation is a critical obstacle to safe clinical translation of human embryonic stem (ES) cell-based therapies in the future. As current methods of isolation are unable to yield 100% pure population of differentiated cells from a pluripotent donor source,potential development of these tumors is a significant concern. Here we used non-invasive reporter gene imaging to investigate the relationship between human ES cell number and teratoma formation in a xenogenic model of ES cell transplantation. Human ES cells (H9 line) were stably transduced with a double fusion (DF) reporter construct containing firefly luciferase and enhanced green fluorescent protein (Fluc- eGFP) driven by a human ubiquitin promoter. Immunodeficient mice received intramyocardial (n = 35) or skeletal muscle (n = 35) injection of 1 × 102,1 × 103,1 × 104,1 × 105 or 1 × 106 DF positive ES cells suspended in saline for myocardium and Matrigel for skeletal muscle. Cell survival and proliferation were monitored via bioluminescence imaging (BLI) for an 8 week period following transplantation. Mice negative for Fluc signal after 8 weeks were followed out to day 365 to confirm tumor absence. Significantly,in this study,a minimum of 1 × 105 ES cells in the myocardium and 1 × 104 cells in the skeletal muscle was observed to be requisite for teratoma development,suggesting that human ES cell number may be a critical factor in teratoma formation. Engraftment and tumor occurrence were also observed to be highly dependent on ES cell number. We anticipate these results should yield useful insights to the safe and reliable application of human ES cell derivatives in the clinic. Keywords
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Hu S et al. (JUN 2016)
JCI Insight 1 8 1--12
Effects of cellular origin on differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cell–derived endothelial cells
Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) can be derived from various types of somatic cells by transient overexpression of 4 Yamanaka factors (OCT4,SOX2,C-MYC,and KLF4). Patient-specific iPSC derivatives (e.g.,neuronal,cardiac,hepatic,muscular,and endothelial cells [ECs]) hold great promise in drug discovery and regenerative medicine. In this study,we aimed to evaluate whether the cellular origin can affect the differentiation,in vivo behavior,and single-cell gene expression signatures of human iPSC-derived ECs. We derived human iPSCs from 3 types of somatic cells of the same individuals: fibroblasts (FB-iPSCs),ECs (EC-iPSCs),and cardiac progenitor cells (CPC-iPSCs). We then differentiated them into ECs by sequential administration of Activin,BMP4,bFGF,and VEGF. EC-iPSCs at early passage (10 textless P textless 20) showed higher EC differentiation propensity and gene expression of EC-specific markers (PECAM1 and NOS3) than FB-iPSCs and CPC-iPSCs. In vivo transplanted EC-iPSC-ECs were recovered with a higher percentage of CD31(+) population and expressed higher EC-specific gene expression markers (PECAM1,KDR,and ICAM) as revealed by microfluidic single-cell quantitative PCR (qPCR). In vitro EC-iPSC-ECs maintained a higher CD31(+) population than FB-iPSC-ECs and CPC-iPSC-ECs with long-term culturing and passaging. These results indicate that cellular origin may influence lineage differentiation propensity of human iPSCs; hence,the somatic memory carried by early passage iPSCs should be carefully considered before clinical translation.
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Neves H et al. (MAY 2006)
Stem cells (Dayton,Ohio) 24 5 1328--37
Effects of Delta1 and Jagged1 on early human hematopoiesis: correlation with expression of notch signaling-related genes in CD34+ cells.
It has been shown that Notch signaling mediated by ligands of both Jagged and Delta families expands the hematopoietic stem cell compartment while blocking or delaying terminal myeloid differentiation. Here we show that Delta1- and Jagged1-expressing stromal cells have distinct effects on the clonogenic and differentiation capacities of human CD34(+) CD38(+) cells. Jagged1 increases the number of bipotent colony-forming unit-granulocyte macrophage (CFU-GM) and unipotent progenitors (CFU-granulocytes and CFU-macrophages),without quantitatively affecting terminal cell differentiation,whereas Delta1 reduces the number of CFU-GM and differentiated monocytic cells. Expression analysis of genes coding for Notch receptors,Notch targets,and Notch signaling modulators in supernatant CD34(+) cells arising upon contact with Jagged1 and Delta1 shows dynamic and differential gene expression profiles over time. At early time points,modest upregulation of Notch1,Notch3,and Hes1 was observed in Jagged1-CD34(+) cells,whereas those in contact with Delta1 strikingly upregulated Notch3 and Hes1. Later,myeloid progenitors with strong clonogenic potential emerging upon contact with Jagged1 upregulated Notch1 and Deltex and downregulated Notch signaling modulators,whereas T/NK progenitors originated by Delta1 strikingly upregulated Notch3 and Deltex and,to a lesser extent,Hes1,Lunatic Fringe,and Numb. Together,the data unravel previously unrecognized expression patterns of Notch signaling-related genes in CD34(+) CD38(+) cells as they develop in Jagged1- or Delta1-stromal cell environments,which appear to reflect sequential maturational stages of CD34(+) cells into distinct cell lineages.
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Simõ et al. (AUG 2011)
Breast cancer research and treatment 129 1 23--35
Effects of estrogen on the proportion of stem cells in the breast.
There is increasing evidence that breast cancers contain tumor-initiating cells with stem cell properties. The importance of estrogen in the development of the mammary gland and in breast cancer is well known,but the influence of estrogen on the stem cell population has not been assessed. We show that estrogen reduces the proportion of stem cells in the normal human mammary gland and in breast cancer cells. The embryonic stem cell genes NANOG,OCT4,and SOX2 are expressed in normal breast stem cells and at higher levels in breast tumor cells and their expression decreases upon differentiation. Overexpression of each stem cell gene reduces estrogen receptor (ER) expression,and increases the number of stem cells and their capacity for invasion,properties associated with tumorigenesis and poor prognosis. These results indicate that estrogen reduces the size of the human breast stem cell pool and may provide an explanation for the better prognosis of ER-positive tumors.
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Larsen ZH et al. (NOV 2016)
Alcoholism,clinical and experimental research 40 11 2339--2350
Effects of Ethanol on Cellular Composition and Network Excitability of Human Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Neurons.
BACKGROUND Prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) in animal models results in excitatory-inhibitory (E/I) imbalance in neocortex due to alterations in the GABAergic interneuron (IN) differentiation and migration. Thus,E/I imbalance is a potential cause for intellectual disability in individuals with fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD),but whether ethanol (EtOH) changes glutamatergic and GABAergic IN specification during human development remains unknown. Here,we created a human cellular model of PAE/FASD and tested the hypothesis that EtOH exposure during differentiation of human pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons (hPSNs) would cause the aberrant production of glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons,resulting in E/I imbalance. METHODS We applied 50 mM EtOH daily to differentiating hPSNs for 50 days to model chronic first-trimester exposure. We used quantitative polymerase chain reaction,immunocytochemical,and electrophysiological analysis to examine the effects of EtOH on hPSN specification and functional E/I balance. RESULTS We found that EtOH did not alter neural induction nor general forebrain patterning and had no effect on the expression of markers of excitatory cortical pyramidal neurons. In contrast,our data revealed highly significant changes to levels of transcripts involved with IN precursor development (e.g.,GSX2,DLX1/2/5/6,NR2F2) as well as mature IN specification (e.g.,SST,NPY). Interestingly,EtOH did not affect the number of GABAergic neurons generated nor the frequency or amplitude of miniature excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic currents. CONCLUSIONS Similar to in vivo rodent studies,EtOH significantly and specifically altered the expression of genes involved with IN specification from hPSNs,but did not cause imbalances of synaptic excitation-inhibition. Thus,our findings corroborate previous studies pointing to aberrant neuronal differentiation as an underlying mechanism of intellectual disability in FASD. However,in contrast to rodent binge models,our chronic exposure model suggests possible compensatory mechanisms that may cause more subtle defects of network processing rather than gross alterations in total E/I balance.
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Sarto P et al. (NOV 2007)
Journal of cardiac failure 13 9 701--8
Effects of exercise training on endothelial progenitor cells in patients with chronic heart failure.
BACKGROUND: The enhancement of circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) obtained by exercise training can be beneficial to patients with cardiac disease. Changes in the levels and differentiation of CD34(pos)/KDR(pos) EPCs,as well as the plasma concentration of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and stromal cell-derived factor (SDF)-1 EPC-mobilizing cytokines,were evaluated in patients with chronic heart failure after 8 weeks of supervised aerobic training (SAT) and 8 weeks of subsequent discontinued SAT (DSAT). METHODS AND RESULTS: The levels of circulating EPC and EPC differentiation potential of 22 patients who underwent SAT were studied by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis and colony forming-unit assay,respectively. The plasma levels of VEGF and SDF-1 were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. In response to SAT,the levels of both EPC and VEGF/SDF-1 markedly increased (P textless .001 vs baseline) but returned to the baseline levels after DSAT. A similar change was observed with the EPC clonogenic potential,but on DSAT the baseline level was incompletely attained. CONCLUSIONS: In response to SAT,patients with chronic heart failure show enhanced EPC levels and clonogenic potential that is mirrored by increased plasma VEGF and SDF-1 levels. DSAT can interfere with the maintenance of training-acquired VEGF/SDF-1-related EPC levels and clonogenic potential.
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