Retrovirus-mediated gene transfer to purified hemopoietic stem cells with long-term lympho-myelopoietic repopulating ability.
- 1 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 86 (22) , 8798-8802
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.86.22.8798
Abstract
Despite recent advances in marrow stem cell purification, controversy about the nature and heterogeneity of cells with the potential for long-term repopulation of lymphoid and myeloid tissues remains. Essential to the resolution of these questions is the use of strategies to track the progeny produced in vivo from individual hemopoietic stem cells in purified populations. We have used a procedure for obtaining highly enriched populations of stem cells with competitive repopulating ability from male mice (pretreated with 5-fluorouracil), and in this paper we present the results of studies in which small numbers (150-2000) of these cells were exposed to supernatant containing a helper-free recombinant retrovirus carrying the neomycin-resistance gene and then were transplanted together with 2 .times. 105 "compromised" female marrow cells into irradiated female recipients. Male cells.sbd.i.e., progeny of purified stem cells.sbd.were found in one or more of the tissues examined (peripheral blood, marrow, spleen, and thymus) in 28 of 28 mice evaluated at various times between 35 and 196 days after transplantation. In 20 of these mice (71%), the neomycin-resistance gene was also detected, although not always at a level that correlated with the proportion of male cells. Analysis of spleen colonies (day 12) generated in secondary recipients confirmed that viral integration was confined to male repopulating cells. In three mice direct evidence of a common clone in both lymphoid and myeloid tissues was also obtained. These results show the feasibility of retrovirus-mediated gene transfer to highly purified populations of lympho-myelopoietic stem cells with long-term (6 months) repopulating potential by using a supernatant infection protocol. This approach should facilitate further analysis of hemopoietic stem cell control in vivo and find future applications in the evolving use of bone marrow transplantation for hemopoietic rescue and gene therapy.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clonal Hematopoiesis Demonstrated by X-Linked DNA Polymorphisms after Allogeneic Bone Marrow TransplantationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Erythrocyte replacement precedes leukocyte replacement during repopulation of W/Wv mice with limiting dilutions of +/+ donor marrow cells.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1988
- Purification and Characterization of Mouse Hematopoietic Stem CellsScience, 1988
- Developmental potential and dynamic behavior of hematopoietic stem cellsCell, 1986
- Factors involved in production of helper virus-free retrovirus vectorsSomatic Cell and Molecular Genetics, 1986
- Introduction of a selectable gene into primitive stem cells capable of long-term reconstitution of the hemopoietic system of W/W miceCell, 1985
- Y-encoded, species-specific DNA in mice: Evidence that the Y chromosome exists in two polymorphic forms in inbred strainsCell, 1984
- Construction of a retrovirus packaging mutant and its use to produce helper-free defective retrovirusCell, 1983
- Loss of proliferative capacity in immunohemopoietic stem cells caused by serial transplantation rather than aging.The Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1978
- The identification in adult bone marrow of pluripotent and restricted stem cells of the myeloid and lymphoid systemsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1977