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Hematopoietic Stem Cells

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Title: Hematopoietic Stem Cells


1
Hematopoietic Stem Cells
  • Warren S. Pear
  • 611 BRB II/III
  • 573-7764
  • wpear_at_mail.med.upenn.edu

3/17/2008
2
Question 1 What is this?
3
Hematopoietic Stem Cells
  • One of the best characterized stem cells
  • Used clinically in bone marrow transplant and
    gene therapy
  • Well established purification methods
  • Development into downstream progeny is well
    understood

4
Hematopoietic Stem Cells
  • Definition
  • Overview of hematopoiesis
  • Identification of HSCs (phenotype)
  • Identification of HSCs (function)
  • Development
  • Microenvironment the Stem Cell Niche
  • Hematopoietic Stem Cell Gene Therapy

5
Stem cellA single cell
  • Ability to differentiate into multiple cell types
  • Maintain self-renewal capacity

6
Pluripotent vs Multipotent Stem Cells
  • Pluripotent
  • Able to differentiate into cells of all 3 germ
    layers endoderm, ectoderm, and mesoderm
  • Examples Embryonic stem cells (ES)-derived from
    inner cell mass of the blastocyst, capable of
    indefinite in vitro culture, used to generate
    gene-targeted mice
  • Multipotent
  • Lineage specific
  • May be isolated from various tissues in fetal and
    adult animals
  • Examples Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs),
    Neuronal stem cells, hepatic stem cells

7
Stem Cells Pluri- vs. Multi-potent
Weissman 2000 Science 2871442
8
Daily Production 4 x 106 cells / sec, 200 x 109
RBCs / day (this is 238 cells or theoretically 38
cell divisions from a single stem cell), 50 x 109
granulocytes / day
Hematopoietic Stem Cells (HSCs)
Weissman 2000 Science 2871442
9
The understanding of hematopoiesis continues to
evolve
Hock Orkin, Nature 2005435, 573
10
The understanding of hematopoiesis continues to
evolve
ETP
Allman, Bhandoola, et al., Nat. Immunol. 4 2003
Hock Orkin, Nature 2005435, 573
11
Hematopoiesis
Made by a single HSC
12
Bone Marrow and Peripheral Blood
Bone Marrow (hi)
Bone Marrow (low)
PB
13
Hematopoietic cells undergo an orchestrated
differentiation program
14
Why HSCs
  • Need to produce a large number of cells from a
    relatively small space (proliferation)
  • Cell acquire lineage specific characteristics or
    functions that define it (differentiation)

15
Therapeutic Uses
  • Bone marrow transplant
  • Gene therapy
  • Transdifferentiation into other lineages (liver,
    muscle) unlikely

16
Existence of the HSC
  • Radiation experiments-hi dose leads to death
    (1945), one cause is bone marrow failure
  • 1949 shielding spleen provides rescue
  • 1951 injection of spleen or BM cells can rescue
  • What is the phenotype
  • Injection of BM cells into irradiated mice led to
    clonogenic mixed spleen colonies (granulocytes,
    macrophages, erythrocytes) (Till McCulloch)
  • CFU-S Assay Day 12 can rescue 2ndary recipients
    (day 8 lack this ability)

17
Existence of HSC CFU-S Assay
Till and McCulloch. 1961. Rad Research 14213
18
CFU-S Each colony is derived from a single stem
cell
Till and McCulloch. 1961. Rad Research 14213
19
CFU-S Assay Breakthrough to identify HSCs
  • 1961- Till McCulloch Spleen Colony Forming
    Units (CFU-S) - Theorize that different types of
    cells arise from proposed colony forming units
  • 1963- Radiation Hybrid Experiments - All cells in
    colony are clonal.
  • 1964 - Lewis and Trobaugh - Colonies re-generate
    colony forming cells whatever their morphology
    (colonies split and 1/2 injected into 2nd
    recepient).
  • 1965 - Becker, et.al. - Stem cells are
    insensitive to thymidine suicide, i.e. they are
    mitotically inactive.

20
Genetic Markers to detect HSCs-chromosomal
translocations
21
How to identify HSCs Finding the one in a
million (0.3-1.2 cells/million)
  • Assays
  • Self-renew and clonally differentiate to form all
    mature blood cell types
  • Generate d12 CFU-S
  • Rescue lethally irradiated recipients long term
  • Competitive reconstitution assays
  • Enrich by phenotypes
  • Size fractionation density gradients,
    elutriation
  • Cell cycle status-?resting
  • Vital Dye exclusion
  • FACS (fluorescence activated cell
    sorting)-current method of choice

22
Use of vital dyes to identify HSCs
Goodell, Nature Med 3 1377
23
Flow Cytometry
24
Immunophenotype of the HSC
  • Adult mouse bone marrow
  • Lin-, c-kit, Sca-1, Flt3-
  • Single cells capable of long-term multilineage
    reconstitution and self-renewal in irradiated
    mice
  • Offspring have limited self-renewal-express Flt3
  • 1/5 cells from young mice capable of long term
    reconstitution
  • Human HSCs-enriched in CD34 fraction
  • Mice LT HSCs-low expression of CD34

Weissman 2000 Science 2871442 Adolfsson 2005
Cell 121 295
25
Immunophenotype of HSCs
Then, inject purified cells into lethally
irradiated mouse and assay for multi-lineage and
long term (gt3 months) engraftment. Can also look
at specific subsets in colony assays.
Hock, H et al., Nature 4312004
26
Rescue of irradiated mice with purified HSCs
Closed circle-100 HSCs Open Square-10,000 HSCs
Weissman 2000 Science 2871442
Clinical Application Purified human HSCs
restore long term hematopoiesis in patients
receiving hi dose radiation/chemotherapy.
Increased dose shortens engraftment
27
Serial Transplantation to detect HSC activity
28
Identifying genes associated with HSC identity
Kiel et al. 2005 Cell 1211109
  • Compared highly purified populations of LT-HSC to
    MPP using Affymetrix oligonucleotide arrays
  • Identified 27 genes that were expressed more
    highly in HSCs (1.9-fold cutoff)
  • One transcript identified was SLAM (CD150)-a cell
    surface receptor not known to be expressed in
    stem cells

29
CD150 cells are enriched in the LT-HSC fraction
and give rise to long term reconsititution
Only CD150 cells were capable of serial
reconstitution
30
CD150 HSCs are localized near osteoblasts and/or
sinusoidal endothelium
31
HSCs from CD150-/- knockout mice are normal
  • What does this mean?

32
Human HSCs LTC-IC Assay
33
NOD-SCID mice can be used to functionally read
out human HSCs
Non-obese diabetic, severe combined
immunodeficient mice can engraft human tissues,
including HSCs
34
Types of HSCs
  • Adult-bone marrow, circulating
  • Fetal liver
  • Placenta
  • Cord blood
  • Yolk sac
  • AGM (aorta-
  • gonad-
  • metanephros
  • region)

35
Fetal Hematopoiesis A dynamic process
  • E7.5 blood and endothelial progenitors emerge in
    AGM blood islands
  • Is there a common precursor?
  • Notch1 may be required for HSC
  • E10-12 colonization of fetal liver from AGM and
    yolk sac (?placenta), Notch1 not required
  • Unique markers AA4.1, Mac1
  • Unique cell types B1 B cells-majority of B cells
    in the newborn
  • Higher capacity than adult HSCs for long-term
    engraftment
  • E16-17 fetal liver HSCs migrate to fetal bone
    marrow
  • Shortly after birth BM is predominant site of
    HSC activity
  • Long term reconstituting ability declines with age

36
Dividing HSCs have 4 developmental choices
  • Self-renewal
  • Differentiation
  • Programmed Cell Death/Survival-bcl2
  • Emigration-GM-CSF mobilization

The frequency of HSCs in hematopoietic organs is
regulated by the fraction of HSCs that choose one
of these fates
Weissman, IL, Science 2872000
37
Effect of manipulating self-renewal
  • Serial transplant experiments showed that the
    number of murine HSCs increased upon each round
    of transfer and then plateaued (4 rds of transfer
    8400-fold increase, Iscove Nawa, Curr Biol
    97, 1997)
  • In vitro expansion of human HSCs by cytokines is
    much less (6-fold in optimal growth factors)
  • How can one obtain large numbers of human HSCs
    for therapeutic manipulation ex vivo?

38
HoxB4 provides yolk sac HSCs with the ability to
engraft adult BM
  • Adult-bone marrow, circulating
  • Fetal liver
  • Cord blood
  • Yolk sac
  • unable to engraft lethally irradiated adults
  • May require education in fetal liver or other
    hematopoietic organs
  • HoxB4 expression sufficient to engraft adults
    (Kyba et al., Cell, 2002)

39
HoxB4
  • DNA binding homeobox protein
  • binds in cooperation with Pbx1 and Meis1
  • Capable of promoting self-renewing divisions of
    BM HSCs in vitro and expanding HSCs in vivo
  • Only transient expression required in yolk sac to
    confer adult engraftment
  • Induces expression of markers of definitive
    hematopoiesis
  • CXCR4-chemokine receptor, Tel-transcription
    factor both may be important for finding the
    stem cell soil
  • What are the key targets?

40
Developmental regulators of HSC expansion (1)
  • Notch and Notch ligands
  • Expression of activated Notch or stimulation of
    Notch through ligands can maintain and expand
    hematopoietic progenitors in culture (not sure if
    LT-HSC) and expand HSCs in vivo (2-fold).

Varnum-Finney et al., Nat Med 62000 Calvi et
al., Nature 4252003
CoR
CSL
41
Notch signaling HSCs
  • Notch signals are required to establish the
    earliest fetal hematopoietic stem cell
  • How about adults
  • Integration of Notch and Wnt signaling in
    hematopoietic stem cell maintenance.
  • Duncan et al., Nature Immunology 2005
  • A fundamental question in hematopoietic stem cell
    (HSC) biology is how self-renewal is controlled.
    ... we identify Notch signaling as a key factor
    in inhibiting differentiation. ... Inhibition of
    Notch signaling led to accelerated
    differentiation of HSCs in vitro and depletion of
    HSCs in vivo. ...

42
DNMAML reveals the site of Notch action during
early T cell development
Sambandam, Maillard et al., Nat Immunol 2005
43
Normal frequency of LSK progenitors in
Notch-deprived bone marrow (retroviral
transduction approach)
Maillard et al., Cell Stem Cell, in the press
44
How does absence of Notch affect competitive
repopulation by HSCs
45
Competitive repopulation potential of
Notch-deprived progenitors in secondary recipients
46
Limiting dilution competitive repopulation
Transduction MigR1 vs. DNMAML1
12 wks
GFP LSK (500, 150, 50) Host-type BM (2x105)
16 wks
Analyze reconstitution
BMT
BMT
47
A role for Notch in the HSC environment?
Ø
48
Developmental regulators of HSC expansion (2)
  • Wnt
  • Purified Wnt3a synergized with growth factors to
    induce proliferation of HSCs in single-cell
    cultures (Willert et al., Nature 4232003)
  • Wnt activation in vivo led to an 8-80-fold
    increase in HSCs and Wnt inhibition blocked
    proliferation (Reya et al., Nature 4232003)
  • Wnt may regulate Notch and/or Hoxb4

49
Developmental regulators of HSC expansion (3)
  • Gfi-1
  • Frequent site of proviral integration in T-cell
    leukemia in mice
  • Encodes a zinc finger, transcriptional repressor
  • KO mice
  • Increased long term HSCs (by phenotype)
  • Unable to serial transplant, recips die at 6-8
    wks
  • Severely compromised in chimeras
  • Increased proliferation

Stay tuned for March 24
50
Lineage Commitment
  • In general, development from pluripotential
    progenitors to mature, specialized cells involves
    the progressive loss of developmental potential
    to other lineages
  • When does irreversible commitment occur?

51
Transcription Factors are important for
hematopoietic development
Notch1
?
Hardy, Curr Op Immunol, 152003 (revised)
52
How to explain Pax5
  • Is Pax5 a commitment factor for B cells?
  • Pax5 downregulates myeloid (c-fms) and T cell
    specific genes (Notch) while activating B cell
    specific (CD19)
  • Pro-B cells from Pax5 knockout mice can develop
    into all hematopoietic lineages-is this
    dedifferentiation?
  • True commitment may require epigenetic changes in
    the chromatin

53
The Stem Cell Niche
Hanahan Weinberg, Cell 100 57, 2000
54
Where is the Stem Cell Niche
But HSCs can also exist outside of the bone marrow
55
You have knocked out a gene that results in a HSC
defect. Suggest an experiment to determine
whether this is cell autonomous
56
Factors regulating HSC homeostasis
Kiel, MJ Morrison, SJ, Nature Rev Immunology,
2008
57
Potential HSC niches in bone marrow spleen
Kiel, MJ Morrison, SJ, 2008
58
Cells that may regulate HSCs in the niche
Kiel, MJ Morrison, SJ, Nat Rev Imm, 2008
59
Potential mechanisms for endosteal regulation of
HSCs
Kiel, MJ Morrison, SJ, Nat Rev Imm, 2008
60
Potential mechanisms for perivascular regulation
of HSCs
Kiel, MJ Morrison, SJ, Nat Rev Imm, 2008
61
Where is the BM niche-Models
Kiel, MJ Morrison, SJ, Nat Rev Imm, 2008
62
HSCs Gene Therapy
63
HSCs Advantages for gene therapy
  • property of self-renewal and multilineage
    differentiation, allowing long term and widely
    distributed production of the transgene from a
    single engineered cell
  • numerous inherited and acquired disorders that
    disrupt the normal functions of HSC and its
    descendents
  • extensive clinical experience with bone marrow
    transplantation
  • ? potential to produce non-hematopoietic cells
    that home to correct sites

64
Diseases for HSC Gene Tx
Kohn, DB, Nature Reviews Cancer, 32003
65
Diseases for HSC Gene Tx
Kohn, DB, Nature Reviews Cancer, 32003
66
Gene Tx using HSCs
Baum et al., Blood 101 2003
67
X-linked Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Syndrome
  • Lack of gamma-c chain with consequent lack of
    cytokine receptors needed for T cell function
    (and T, B, NK development)
  • 1/80,000 live births, most common SCID
  • Death within 1st year of life from recurrent
    infections
  • Tx BMT of HLA-identical BM gt90 survival, but
    most patients lack ideal HLA-match and survival
    is 50-70
  • Gene Tx Restore function to autologous cells

68
Retroviral-mediated Gene Tx for SCID
Autologous BM
69
X-SCID Gene Tx
Kohn, DB, Nature Reviews Cancer, 32003
70
Gene Tx for X-SCID
  • In French trial
  • 9/10 showed evidence of immune reconstitution
    following gene tx, kinetics similar to
    HLA-matched BMT
  • Gene tx is successful
  • 4 years later
  • T cell leukemia development in 3/9.
  • Currently being treated with chemotx
  • 1 child has died from T-ALL
  • Side effects of gene tx treatment have
    substantial risk

71
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72
What would you do?
  • Continue trial or Halt trial?
  • How about other retroviral gene tx trials in
    progress?
  • How about new trial applications?
  • What additional information would you want to
    know?

73
Retroviral Insertional Mutagenesis
  • Retrovirus inserts randomly into chromosomal DNA
  • Has the potential to activate transcription,
    create a dominant negative, or inactivate an
    allele (heterozygous)
  • When delivering a gene, has the potential to
    induce a 2nd hit.

74
The provirus caused oncogene activation
  • Both had a single proviral integration into
    chromosome 11
  • Led to expression of the LMO2 gene, a known
    oncogene in T cell leukemia
  • How can you determine when the malignant clone
    first emerged?
  • Is this an integration hotspot or selection?

75
What is the future of HSC gene tx?
  • Need to evaluate each disease?
  • No reports of leukemia in other gene tx trials
    (250 pts in 40 trials)
  • Only 1 reported example in mice (AML in NGFR gene
    marking led to EVI-1 expression)
  • HIV lentivirus does not seem to cause leukemia
  • Will it be necessary to analyze integration sites
    prior to cell transfer? What methodology must be
    developed?
  • Design of vectors capable of inducing cellular
    suicide, inactivation of the transgene,
    site-specific integration, or prevention of
    insertional activation

76
Designer Stem Cell Therapy
Happy St. Patricks Day
77
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