Hardie DG and Carling D (JUN 1997)
European journal of biochemistry / FEBS 246 2 259--73
The AMP-activated protein kinase--fuel gauge of the mammalian cell?
A single entity,the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK),phosphorylates and regulates in vivo hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase (key regulatory enzymes of sterol synthesis and fatty acid synthesis,respectively),and probably many additional targets. The kinase is activated by high AMP and low ATP via a complex mechanism,which involves allosteric regulation,promotion of phosphorylation by an upstream protein kinase (AMPK kinase),and inhibition of dephosphorylation. This protein-kinase cascade represents a sensitive system,which is activated by cellular stresses that deplete ATP,and thus acts like a cellular fuel gauge. Our central hypothesis is that,when it detects a 'low-fuel' situation,it protects the cell by switching off ATP-consuming pathways (e.g. fatty acid synthesis and sterol synthesis) and switching on alternative pathways for ATP generation (e.g. fatty acid oxidation). Native AMP-activated protein kinase is a heterotrimer consisting of a catalytic alpha subunit,and beta and gamma subunits,which are also essential for activity. All three subunits have homologues in budding yeast,which are components of the SNF1 protein-kinase complex. SNF1 is activated by glucose starvation (which in yeast leads to ATP depletion) and genetic studies have shown that it is involved in derepression of glucose-repressed genes. This raises the intriguing possibility that AMPK may regulate gene expression in mammals. AMPK/SNF1 homologues are found in higher plants,and this protein-kinase cascade appears to be an ancient system which evolved to protect cells against the effects of nutritional or environmental stress.
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Dani C et al. (JUN 1997)
Journal of cell science 110 ( Pt 1 1279--85
Differentiation of embryonic stem cells into adipocytes in vitro.
Embryonic stem cells,derived from the inner cell mass of murine blastocysts,can be maintained in a totipotent state in vitro. In appropriate conditions embryonic stem cells have been shown to differentiate in vitro into various derivatives of all three primary germ layers. We describe in this paper conditions to induce differentiation of embryonic stem cells reliably and at high efficiency into adipocytes. A prerequisite is to treat early developing embryonic stem cell-derived embryoid bodies with retinoic acid for a precise period of time. Retinoic acid could not be substituted by adipogenic hormones nor by potent activators of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors. Treatment with retinoic acid resulted in the subsequent appearance of large clusters of mature adipocytes in embryoid body outgrowths. Lipogenic and lipolytic activities as well as high level expression of adipocyte specific genes could be detected in these cultures. Analysis of expression of potential adipogenic genes,such as peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors gamma and delta and CCAAT/enhancer binding protein beta,during differentiation of retinoic acid-treated embryoid bodies has been performed. The temporal pattern of expression of genes encoding these nuclear factors resembled that found during mouse embryogenesis. The differentiation of embryonic stem cells into adipocytes will provide an invaluable model for the characterisation of the role of genes expressed during the adipocyte development programme and for the identification of new adipogenic regulatory genes.
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Stewart AK et al. ( )
Cancer gene therapy 4 3 148--56
In vitro maintenance and retroviral transduction of human myeloma cells in long-term marrow cultures.
One objective of clinical gene marking trials in multiple myeloma (MM) is to determine the extent to which relapse after stem cell transplant is attributable to contamination of the autograft with myeloma cells. A requirement in these studies is ex vivo genetic marking of malignant cells present in autografts which are derived from patients exposed to significant prior chemotherapy. We evaluated gene marking of cloonogenic myeloma cells in marrow aspirates from 14 patients with MM. To effect gene transfer we utilized a long-term marrow culture (LTMC) system previously shown to facilitate gene transfer into a spectrum of hematopoietic progenitor and stem cells. Transduction of cells in LTMC was performed by multiple supernatant exposure. At LTMC initiation and after 21 days of culture malignant cells were assessed by morphology,flow cytometry,and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The mean number of day 21 LTMC adherent layer-derived granulocyte/macrophage progenitors as a percentage of the original inoculum was within the normal range for this technique. The efficiency of transduction of normal hematopoietic progenitors as determined by the number of colonies positive for proviral DNA by PCR,G418 resistance,and X-gal staining was also within the expected range; 65%,44% and 23%,respectively. Thus,there was no evidence that prior chemotherapy exposure or malignant cell contamination compromised cell survival or gene transfer efficiency in LTMC. All patients retained plasma cells in LTMCs for the duration of the 21-day culture period. Molecular analysis confirmed the persistence of clonal IgVH gene rearrangements in day 21 LTMC-derived DNA from 6 of 12 informative patients (50%). PCR using allele-specific primers when available confirmed the specificity of IgVH rearrangements for the myeloma clone. In 2 of the 14 patients,expansion of clonogenic cells was demonstrated in LTMC. In both cases there was strong evidence for transfer of reporter genes (neo and LacZ) into the myeloma clone: morphologically abnormal G418-resistant colonies demonstrated intense staining for beta-galactosidase,and cytospin preparations showed 100% plasma cells with monoclonal heavy and light chain restriction. In one patient,individual colonies positive for beta-galactosidase bore a cytogenetic abnormality characteristic of the patient's myeloma clone. PCR of DNA from pooled plasma cell colonies using tumor-specific CDR3 primers was positive. Our results demonstrate the maintenance of myeloma cells in vitro for up to 21 days in LTMC. They further illustrate that these cells can be genetically marked using transduction protocols currently being tested in clinical trials of hematopoietic cell gene transfer.
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Prosper F et al. (JUN 1997)
Blood 89 11 3991--7
Primitive long-term culture initiating cells (LTC-ICs) in granulocyte colony-stimulating factor mobilized peripheral blood progenitor cells have similar potential for ex vivo expansion as primitive LTC-ICs in steady state bone marrow.
We have recently shown that more than 90% of long-term culture initiating cells (LTC-IC) mobilized in the peripheral blood (PB) of normal individuals express HLA-DR and CD38 antigens and can sustain hematopoiesis for only 5 weeks. However,10% of LTC-IC in mobilized PB are CD34+ HLA-DR- and CD34+ CD38- and can sustain hematopoiesis for at least 8 weeks. We now examine the ex vivo expansion potential of CD34+ HLA-DR+ cells (rich in mature LTC-IC) and CD34+ HLA-DR- cells (rich in primitive LTC-IC) in granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) mobilized PB progenitor cells (PBPC). Cells were cultured in contact with M2-10B4 cells (contact) or in transwells above M2-10B4 (noncontact) without and with interleukin-3 (IL-3) and macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP-1alpha) for 2 and 5 weeks. Progeny were evaluated for the presence of colony-forming cells (CFC) and LTC-IC. When CD34+ HLA-DR+ PB cells were cultured in contact cultures without cytokines,a threefold expansion of CFC was seen at 2 weeks,but an 80% decrease in CFC was seen at week 5. Further,the recovery of LTC-IC at week 2 was only 17% and 1% at week 5. This confirms our previous observation that although CD34+ HLA-DR+ mobilized PB cells can initiate long-term cultures,they are relatively mature and cannot sustain long-term hematopoiesis. In contrast,when CD34+ HLA-DR- mobilized PB cells were cultured in contact cultures without cytokines,CFC expansion persisted until week 5 and 49% and 11% of LTC-IC were recovered at week 2 and 5,respectively. As we have shown for steady state bone marrow (BM) progenitors,recovery of LTC-IC was threefold higher when CD34+ HLA-DR- PBPC were cultured in noncontact rather than contact cultures,and improved further when IL-3 and MIP-1alpha were added to noncontact cultures (96 +/- 2% maintained at week 5). We conclude that although G-CSF mobilizes a large population of mature" CD34+ HLA-DR+ LTC-IC with a limited proliferative capacity�
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Wang JC et al. (JUN 1997)
Blood 89 11 3919--24
Primitive human hematopoietic cells are enriched in cord blood compared with adult bone marrow or mobilized peripheral blood as measured by the quantitative in vivo SCID-repopulating cell assay.
We have previously reported the development of in vivo functional assays for primitive human hematopoietic cells based on their ability to repopulate the bone marrow (BM) of severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) and nonobese diabetic/SCID (NOD/SCID) mice following intravenous transplantation. Accumulated data from gene marking and cell purification experiments indicate that the engrafting cells (defined as SCID-repopulating cells or SRC) are biologically distinct from and more primitive than most cells that can be assayed in vitro. Here we demonstrate through limiting dilution analysis that the NOD/SCID xenotransplant model provides a quantitative assay for SRC. Using this assay,the frequency of SRC in cord blood (CB) was found to be 1 in 9.3 x 10(5) cells. This was significantly higher than the frequency of 1 SRC in 3.0 x 10(6) adult BM cells or 1 in 6.0 x 10(6) mobilized peripheral blood (PB) cells from normal donors. Mice transplanted with limiting numbers of SRC were engrafted with both lymphoid and multilineage myeloid human cells. This functional assay is currently the only available method for quantitative analysis of human hematopoietic cells with repopulating capacity. Both CB and mobilized PB are increasingly being used as alternative sources of hematopoietic stem cells in allogeneic transplantation. Thus,the findings reported here will have important clinical as well as biologic implications.
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Serrero G and Lepak NM (APR 1997)
Biochemical and biophysical research communications 233 1 200--2
Prostaglandin F2alpha receptor (FP receptor) agonists are potent adipose differentiation inhibitors for primary culture of adipocyte precursors in defined medium.
Prostaglandin F2alpha inhibits adipose differentiation of primary culture of adipocyte precursors and of the adipogenic cell line 1246 in defined medium. In the present paper,we investigated the effect of FP receptor agonists cloprostenol and fluprostenol on the differentiation of newborn rat adipocyte precursors in primary culture. The results show that cloprostenol and fluprostenol are very potent inhibitors of adipose differentiation. Dose response studies indicate that both agonists are more potent than PGF2alpha in inhibiting adipocyte precursors differentiation. 50% inhibition of adipose differentiation was observed at a concentration of 3 x 10(-12) M for cloprostenol and 3 to 10 x 10(-11) M for fluprostenol respectively whereas the PGF2alpha concentration required to elicit the same effect was 10(-8) M. In contrast compounds structurally related to PGE2 such as 17-phenyl trinor PGE2 had no effect on adipose differentiation except when added at a 10,000-fold higher concentration.
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Palmer TD et al. (JAN 1997)
Molecular and cellular neurosciences 8 6 389--404
The adult rat hippocampus contains primordial neural stem cells.
Adult-derived hippocampal progenitors generate neurons,astrocytes,and oligodendrocytes in vitro and following grafting into the adult brain. Although these progenitors have a considerable capacity for in vitro self renewal,it is not known if each lineage is generated by separate committed precursors or by multipotent stem cells. By genetic marking,we have followed individual cells through the process of proliferative expansion,commitment,and differentiation. All three lineages are generated by single marked cells and the relative proportions of each lineage can be strongly influenced by environmental cues. Differentiation is accompanied by a characteristic progression of lineage-specific markers and can be potentiated by retinoic acid,elevated cyclic AMP,or neurotrophic factors. The ability to genetically mark and clone normal diploid hippocampal progenitors provides the first definitive evidence that multipotent neural stem cells exist outside of the adult striatal subventricular zone and supports the hypothesis that FGF-2-responsive neural stem cells may be broadly distributed in the adult brain.
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Ghaffari S et al. (APR 1997)
British journal of haematology 97 1 22--8
Diverse effects of anti-CD44 antibodies on the stromal cell-mediated support of normal but not leukaemic (CML) haemopoiesis in vitro.
We have identified three non-cross-reacting anti-human CD44 monoclonal antibodies that have significant positive or negative (or no) effects on normal human haemopoiesis in the long-term culture (LTC) system. These effects manifested as increases or decreases in the number of LTC-initiating cells (LTC-IC),and the number of colony-forming cells (CFC) recovered from cultures in which either unseparated or highly purified CD34+ CD38- normal marrow cells were placed on pre-established normal marrow feeder layers in the presence or absence of each antibody. The effects seen were rapid and sustained,and dependent on the presence of a preformed feeder layer. Interestingly,the same anti-CD44 antibodies had no effect on the maintenance of leukaemic (Ph+) progenitors (from patients with chronic myeloid leukaemia) when these cells were cultured on preformed feeder layers established from normal marrow. CD44 appears to be part of a mechanism by which stromal elements can regulate primitive normal haemopoietic cells but not their leukaemic (Ph+) counterparts.
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Blair A et al. (MAY 1997)
Blood 89 9 3104--12
Lack of expression of Thy-1 (CD90) on acute myeloid leukemia cells with long-term proliferative ability in vitro and in vivo.
Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is thought to be maintained by a small population of leukemic progenitor cells. To define the phenotype of such cells with long-term proliferative capacity in vitro and in vivo,we have used the production of leukemic clonogenic cells (CFU) after 2 to 8 weeks in suspension culture as a measure of these cells in vitro and compared their phenotype with that of cells capable of engrafting nonobese diabetic severe combined immune deficient (NOD/SCID) mice. Leukemic blast peripheral blood cells were evaluated for expression of CD34 and Thy-1 (CD90) antigens. The majority of AML blast cells at diagnosis lacked expression of Thy-1. Most primary CFU-blast and the CFU detected at up to 8 weeks from suspension cultures were CD34+/Thy-1-. AML cells that were capable of engrafting NOD/SCID mice were also found to have the CD34+/Thy-1- phenotype. However,significant engraftment was achieved using both CD34+/Thy-1- and CD34- subfractions from one AML M5 patient. These results suggest that while heterogeneity exists between individual patients,the leukemic progenitor cells that are capable of maintaining the disease in vitro and in vivo differ from normal hematopoietic progenitor cells in their lack of expression of Thy-1.
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Zandstra PW et al. (APR 1997)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 94 9 4698--703
Cytokine manipulation of primitive human hematopoietic cell self-renewal.
Previous studies have shown that primitive human hematopoietic cells detectable as long-term culture-initiating cells (LTC-ICs) and colony-forming cells (CFCs) can be amplified when CD34(+) CD38(-) marrow cells are cultured for 10 days in serum-free medium containing flt3 ligand (FL),Steel factor (SF),interleukin (IL)-3,IL-6,and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor. We now show that the generation of these two cell types in such cultures is differentially affected at the single cell level by changes in the concentrations of these cytokines. Thus,maximal expansion of LTC-ICs (60-fold) was obtained in the presence of 30 times more FL,SF,IL-3,IL-6,and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor than could concomitantly stimulate the near-maximal (280-fold) amplification of CFCs. Furthermore,the reduced ability of suboptimal cytokine concentrations to support the production of LTC-ICs could be ascribed to a differential response of the stimulated cells since this was not accompanied by a change in the number of input CD34(+) CD38(-) cells that proliferated. Reduced LTC-IC amplification in the absence of a significant effect on CFC generation also occurred when the concentrations of FL and SF were decreased but the concentration of IL-3 was high (as compared with cultures containing high levels of all three cytokines). To our knowledge,these findings provide the first evidence suggesting that extrinsically acting cytokines can alter the self-renewal behavior of primary human hematopoietic stem cells independent of effects on their viability or proliferation.
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Hogge D et al. (MAR 1997)
British journal of haematology 96 4 790--800
Quantitation and characterization of human megakaryocyte colony-forming cells using a standardized serum-free agarose assay.
Human progenitors of the megakaryocyte (Mk) lineage were detected by their ability to generate colonies-containing from 3 to textgreater 100 Mk,detectable as glycoprotein IIb/IIIa+ cells in APAAP-stained whole mount agarose cultures. Optimal growth conditions were achieved through the use of a defined serum substitute and a suitable cocktail of recombinant cytokines. Under these culture conditions,the smallest Mk-containing colonies (CFC-Mk) were detectable within a week followed by colonies containing larger numbers of Mk over the ensuing 2 weeks. The total number of CFC-Mk at 18-21 d was linearly related to the number of cells plated. Variation in the cytokines added showed that thrombopoietin (TPO) or IL-3 alone would support the formation of large numbers of CFC-Mk. However,optimal yields of colonies containing cells of both Mk and non-Mk lineages required the addition of other growth factors,of which a combination of IL-3,IL-6,GM-CSF and Steel factor (SF) +/- TPO was the best of those tested. The further addition of erythropoietin to this combination reduced the number of large pure' Mk colonies seen and in their place a corresponding number of mixed erythroid-Mk colonies became detectable. Flt3-ligand alone was unable to support the growth of CFC-Mk nor did it enhance their growth when combined with other factors. Plating of FACS-sorted sub-populations of CD34+ marrow cells in both serum-free agarose and methylcellulose assays demonstrated that most CFC-Mk are generated from CD34+ cells that are CD45RA- and CD71+�
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Zhang LH et al. (JAN 1997)
Life sciences 60 10 751--62
Antiproliferative and immunosuppressive properties of microcolin A, a marine-derived lipopeptide.
The immunosuppressive effects of microcolin A,a lipopeptide extracted from the marine blue green alga Lyngbya majuscula were investigated. Microcolin A suppressed concanavalin A (IC50 = 5.8 nM),phytohemagglutinin (IC50 = 12.5 nM) and lipopolysaccharide (IC50 = 8.0 nM) induced proliferation of murine splenocytes. Mixed lymphocyte reaction (IC50 = 5.0 nM),anti-IgM (mu-chain specific) (IC50 = 10.0 nM),and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate plus ionomycin (IC50 = 5.8 nM) stimulation of murine splenocytes were all similarly suppressed by microcolin A. The inhibitory activity of microcolin A was time-dependent and reversible and was not associated with a reduction in cell viability. Moreover,microcolin A not only inhibited IL-2 production and IL-2 receptor expression by concanavalin A activated splenocytes,but also suppressed in vitro antibody responsiveness to keyhole limpet hemocyanin. These results indicate that microcolin A is a potent immunosuppressive and antiproliferative agent.
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